MEQ

MEQ: Gold Medal Rundown

The Bluegrass Tournament was one of many during the opening weekend of March. A KiVA team winning there is a regular and frequent occurrence. It certainly doesn’t shake up the volleyball world the way a KiVA team winning a national qualifier does! When a team like Adidas KiVA 16 Red – ranked No. 23 in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50 National Rankings – finished first at its home event earlier this month, it was a sign the team could be finding its groove. But coming to Indy presented not only much stiffer competition but a scenario where what would KiVA do should it be in position to accept a bid? KiVA hasn’t participated in a USAV national championship since 2005. Yet, with KiVA in contention on the final day a decision would need to be made should KiVA keep advancing. After beating both No. 16 Legacy 16-1 Adidas and No. 43 No Name 16 Sarah, KiVA made the four-team gold bracket. Not long after, so did No. 18 Tribe 16 Elite Cardinal. With Tribe already owning a bid, KiVA – along with No. 11 Circle City 16 Purple and No. 14 MKE Sting 16 Gold – already knew their fates. All three were assured of bids before playing another match. When KiVA coaches confirmed they were accepting the Open bid, a bit of history was made! KiVA is back in a USAV national championship. But, it gets even better. Not only did KiVA qualify, KiVA wasn’t done yet, downing both Tribe and Circle City to finish in first place. KiVA lost on Day 1 to unranked Boiler Jrs 16 Gold and then started Day 2 with a setback to No. 12 Mich Elite 16 Mizuno. KiVA was facing possible elimination in its next match but upset No. 8 A5 16 Gabe and eventually moved on when Mich Elite beat A5. KiVA didn’t lose again, riding its Bluegrass victory to an even bigger triumph in Indy! KiVA open the gold bracket by fending off Tribe in three, 23-25, 25-18, 15-9, before tackling Circle City in the final, 25-23, 28-26. Circle City held off MKE Sting in three, 25-22, 22-25, 15-8, in the other semifinal. Much credit goes to KiVA for turning it on since finishing 58th at Triple Crown last month. It was a tough ending in Kansas City after a promising Day 1 started with victories over Austin Skyline 16 Royal and Madfrog 16 Green. But KiVA was upset by unranked SA Magic 16 Elite to start Day 2 then lost to both AVA TX 16 Adidas and Tulsa Power 16-1 in succession to tumble down the standings. KiVA did lose on Day 1 at Bluegrass to Tri-State Elite 16 Blue in three and picked up key victories over AVC Cle 16 Red and SPVB 16 Elite there as well. While a strong showing, expecting KiVA to make a leap in such a short time like it did at MEQ wouldn’t be fair but what an accomplishment nonetheless. Sting’s qualifying chances hinged on a showdown with Mich Elite for first in their gold pool. Both were 1-0 and needed to win to have any shot at qualifying. Circle City took care of its business, sweeping both Adrenaline 16 Doug and Co Jrs 16 Shannon in its gold pool to advance. As for 17 Open, Co Jrs 17 Kevin’s time in Indy could have hardly gone any better. Ranked No. 8 nationally, Co Jrs is proving itself as a Top-10 team with another impressive performance on a big stage. After tying for fifth at last month’s Triple Crown NIT, Co Jrs’ next national act featured going 10-0 and claiming gold at MEQ. There was not much resistance as Co Jrs swept its way through the first two days of competition before a thrilling Day 3 concluded with gold-medalist Co Jrs being one of three teams to earn bids. The way the drama was playing out offered two paths to qualifying. The straight forward and guaranteed one was reaching the gold bracket. The much riskier one with nothing assured was through the fifth-place bracket. This is what both Co Jrs and No. 37 Elevation 17 Ulland faced as they were going toe-to-toe for first place in Gold Pool 2. The winner was assured a bid because previously-qualified and second-ranked Dynasty 17 Black had already captured first place in its gold pool. But it was not an elimination match as Elevation and Co Jrs would still have another shot at qualifying should they finish second in the pool. That route came courtesy of No. 5 Triangle 17 Black, which even though was entering a third set of its own against No. 21 Academy 17 Tsunami had already clinched first place based on tiebreakers should Triangle lose. More on why this result still mattered in a moment. With both Dynasty and Triangle reaching the gold bracket, the final remaining bid would go to the team finishing fifth and the only way to determine that was to a have a four-team playoff between the second-place gold-pool finishers. Co Jrs squeaked out its victory over Elevation, 23-25, 25-17, 15-13, and joined 1st Alliance 17 Gold in bidding. 1st Alliance was actually the first team to learn its fate after downing both No. 9 NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami and No. 48 Pohaku 17-1 in its gold pool and thus earning its bid once Dynasty won its pool. Once Triangle advanced to the gold bracket with Dynasty, it made every other result relevant as it gave life to the second-place teams. That meant Pohaku beating NKYVC was huge, as Pohaku was still in it. So was Elevation. But unfortunately for Academy it was not. That’s because Academy needed to sweep Triangle in order to advance. Instead, No. 41 Boiler Jrs 17 Gold beating Academy the match prior was huge because Boiler Jrs was part of the fifth-place bracket, which also included No. 17 KC Power 17 Black. Back to Co Jrs for a moment. The only teams to beat Co

Read More »

MEQ: Day 2 Show Stoppers And More

It’s not unusual to see disparity in pools on the second day of a national qualifier, as was the case Saturday at MEQ in Indianapolis. The luck of draw played a factor as teams competed for spots in gold pools on the final day. Let’s look at 16 Open, where Pool 1 was gnarly. Circle City 16 Purple, the top seed overall and ranked No. 11 in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50, went 3-0 on Day 1 and was “rewarded” by drawing both No. 17 Austin Skyline 16 Royal and No. 19 AVC Cle 16 Red. With only room for two, someone was going to be left out. After all three finished tied at 2-1, it was Circle City advancing in first place followed by Austin Skyline in second. Austin Skyline opened the pool with a clutch victory over Circle City but lost control of the pool when it fell to AVC before downing USA South 16 Purple. Circle City earned first by sweeping AVC in the 1 v 2 contest and thus eliminating AVC. Pools 4 and 5 were two more pools that were tougher than others. Pool 4 featured No. 8 A5 16 Gabe, No. 12 Mich Elite 16 Mizuno and No. 23 Adidas KiVA 16 Red. It was another case of one must go and it turned out to be the highest-ranked of the trio in A5, which finished 1-2 after losing to both Mich Elite and KiVA. Mich Elite made it out on top at 3-0, followed by KiVA at 2-1. Somewhat surprisingly, Mich Elite beating KiVA in three sets was the only match of the six from the pool to go the distance. It was No. 14 MKE Sting 16 Gold, No. 16 Legacy 16-1 Adidas and No. 44 GP 16 Rox together in Pool 5. GP had a safety net known as already having a bid which it earned at the Sunshine Classic. It was Sting coming out ahead, grabbing first at 3-0. Legacy followed at 2-1, leaving GP at 1-2 and now out of contention for creating any trickle down. With GP and HPSTL 16 Royal – which went 1-2 on Day 1 and was eliminated – not among Day 3’s gold pools, it leaves No. 18 Tribe 16 Elite Cardinal as the lone previously-qualified team. That’s big in that we now know trickle down in 16 Open can’t exceed fourth place, so teams must win their gold pools at the very least to have a chance at qualifying. Tribe went 3-0 in Pool 6 on Day 3. Some of the other pools in 16 Open opened the door and allowed teams to take advantage. One such case was Pool 3, which was composed of unranked Boiler Jrs 16 Gold, No. 38 Co Jrs 16 Shannon, unranked Adversity 16 Adidas and unranked EliteVBTC 16 Black. It was the No. 4 team in EliteVBTC rising up and going 3-0. Co Jrs was second at 2-1 as both advanced. In Pool 2, No. 15 Dynasty 15 Black and No. 43 No Name 16 Sarah were with unranked foes in CUVC 16 Beast and KC Power 16 Black. While it seemed like Dynasty’s pool to win, it was actually No Name (at 3-0) and CUVC (at 2-1) advancing while Dynasty was knocked out after going 1-2 with losses to both. In 17 Open, it was a different story as the top five seeds combined to go 15-0. Only Pohaku 17-1 lost as the No. 1 team in a pool, but managed to advance still after taking second in a three-way tie at 2-1. Pohaku tied with both No. 11 Rockwood Thunder 16 Elite and No. 21 Academy 17 Tsunami. Rockwood Thunder was the odd team out based on tiebreakers and took third. It makes Rockwood Thunder the highest-ranked team from our Top 50 missing out on gold pools. Both Pools 2 and 5 came down to three-way ties at 1-2 behind the first-place finishers. While No. 8 Co Jrs 17 Kevin went 3-0 in Pool 2, No. 40 Adidas KiVA 17 Red and unranked teams in Michio 17 National and Mintonette Sports m.71 tied at 1-2. KiVA earned second based on the best set percentage of the trio. Second-ranked Dynasty 17 Black went 3-0 in Pool 5, where No. 19 Metro 17 Travel, No. 37 Elevation 17 Ulland and No. 38 Circle City 17 Purple all finished at 1-2 behind Dynasty. Elevation took second on tiebreakers, leaving Metro eliminated. Metro – along with Dynasty and No. 5 Triangle 17 Black – owned a bid prior to MEQ. While Metro being bumped won’t impact Metro it does eliminate another possible trickle-down spot. And with Dynasty and Triangle positioned to win their Day 3 pools, that would have trickle down extend to fifth place. *** DAY 2 SHOW STOPPERS Reese Messer S Dynasty 17 Black: A 5-star recruit from the Class of 2025, Messer is silky smooth with her delivery and sets at a high-level from her hands to her placement. She connects well with all her hitters and moves the ball around as well as any setter. Jada Ingram MB Dynasty 17 Black: A 4-star UNLV commit, Ingram was having a big day in the middle. She seemed close to unstoppable, beating defenders on 1s and slides while banging down balls. Ava Grevengoed OH Michio 17 National: Grevengoed is a bit undersized on the left but takes plenty of swings as one of the main attackers. She has a nice arm and did well helping her team compete against higher-ranked opponents. Gabriella Woltman RS Michio 17 National: Woltman held it down on the right. She adds some power to the lineup and was taking hard swings. Renee Jones RS Metro 17 Travel: Jones – a 3-star recruit – puts up a wall of a block and can be imposing for smaller attackers. She’s also part of the offensive plans, able to deliver points with her lefty swing. Izzy Starck S/RS Co Jrs 17 Kevin: Starck – a 5-star

Read More »

MEQ: Day 1 Show Stoppers And More

With the Red Rock Rave national qualifier ending with Wave 16 Kevin finishing on top of 16 Open, it was one of those What Just Happened?!? moments we all love in volleyball. The latest edition of What Just Happened is on the other end of spectrum unfortunately. It features HPSTL 16 Royal, which started as the No. 2 overall seed in 16 Open at MEQ in Indianapolis. HPSTL is one of three teams already owning an Open bid after earning one at Sunshine Classic. However, after HPSTL was eliminated on Day 1 after going 1-2, the question must be asked, what just happened?!? In the preview I wrote I had a hunch we wouldn’t see any of the qualified teams – GP 16 Rox and Tribe 16 Elite Cardinal being the other two – factoring into any possible trickle down but I hardly thought we would see any of them gone after Day 1? Coming into Sunshine two weeks ago, HPSTL hadn’t taken any poor losses. The main issue was it wasn’t picking up any quality victories either except for one over Austin Skyline 16 Royal and avenging a loss to Tri-State Elite 16 Blue. Both those results happened at Triple Crown. HP picked up big wins at Sunshine over A5 16 Gabe, GP, Tribe, Skyline 16 Royal and Mich Elite 16 Mizuno on its way to qualifying. That not only inspired hope of HPSTL finding its groove, but is what gave HPSTL the No. 2 overall seed here in Indy. It was so shocking I haven’t even mentioned the teams to beat HPSTL yet, which were unranked CUVC 16 Beast and USA South 16 Premier. CUVC went 3-0 as the No. 2 team in the pool to take over the overall No. 2 seed. USA South went 2-1 and grabbed second. Tons of credit to both those clubs for picking up such a quality victory! It was a wild day elsewhere in 16 Open as well, including No. 9 seed Team Pineapple 16 Black eliminated after going 1-2. I actually had Team Pineapple, at No. 29 nationally, ranked one spot ahead of No. 30 HPSTL in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50. Both No. 38 Co Jrs 16 Shannon and unranked Union 16-1 UA upset Team Pineapple. Co Jrs was upset by unranked MOD Elite 16 Blue but still won the pool at 2-1 after finishing in a two-way tie with Union. Adidas KiVA 16 Red – seeded No. 3 overall and ranked No. 23 in the nation – was upset by unranked Boiler Jrs 16 Gold. Boiler Jrs won the pool at 3-0 while KiVA went 2-1. KiVA was not the highest-ranked team to lose from our Top 50 however. Dynasty 16 Black – ranked No. 15 – and No. 17 Austin Skyline 16 Royal were in the same pool on Day 1, so something had to give. Dynasty won the pool at 3-0 as the No. 2 team. Austin Skyline moved on at 2-1 as those two flip seeds. We’ll consider that a win for the national rankings over the seedings. The rest of the top-ranked teams all finished 3-0, including No. 8 A5, No. 11 Circle City 16 Purple, No. 12 Mich Elite, No. 14 MKE Sting 16 Gold, No. 16 Legacy 16-1 Adidas and No. 18 Tribe. The other big news from 16 Open was unranked Adrenaline 16 Doug going 3-0 as the No. 3 team in Pool 8. Adrenaline upset both No. 40 NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami and No. 44 GP. GP went 2-1 and finished second while NKYVC went 1-2 and was knocked out of contention. Also, unranked Adversity 16 Adidas upset No. 31 Alamo 16 Premier in Pool 10. That was key because Adversity advanced as the No. 3 team while Alamo finished 1-2 and was eliminated as the No. 2 team in the pool. The results from 17 Open were not as all over the place. The No. 11 overall seed and No. 1 team in Pool 11 in Alamo 17 Premier went 1-2 and finished in third. Both No. 41 Boiler Jrs 17 Gold and Michio 17 National uprooted Alamo. Boiler Jrs finished 3-0 to win the pool. Considering I don’t have Alamo ranked in the Top 50, it didn’t come as that much of a surprise to see Boiler Jrs win the pool. While Alamo was the only No. 1 team from a pool not to advance, a few No. 2 teams didn’t move on either. Team Pineapple 17 Black – ranked No. 50 – Union 17-1 UA, HPSTL 17 Royal and CHAVC 17 Black all finished at 1-2 as No. 2 teams in their respective pools and are out of contention. A couple of other upsets didn’t eliminate teams but will shake up the seedings for Day 2. Pohaku 17-1, ranked No. 48, took down No. 19 Metro 17 Travel. Metro is one of three teams already owning a bid in the field. Also, No. 37 Elevation 17 Ulland upset No. 21 Academy 17 Tsunami to win Pool 7. Beyond that, the top-ranked teams all fared well. Second-ranked Dynasty 17 Black, No. 5 Triangle 17 Black – both which have bids already – No. 7 1st Alliance 17 Gold, No. 8 Co Jrs 17 Kevin, No. 9 NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami, No. 11 Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite and No. 17 KC Power 17 Black all finished 3-0 and won their respective pools. *** DAY 1 SHOW STOPPERS Larsen Terrill S Mintonette Sports m.61: A 3-star recruit, Terrill is a smooth operator. She locates well on the regular and sets a consistent, clean ball. Callie Krueger L/DS Austin Skyline 16 Royal: Krueger – a 4-star recruit – commands the back row. She showed great range, covered well and was passing dimes. Makayla White MB Austin Skyline 16 Royal: White was making herself known in the middle. She was touching balls blocking and turning around and giving her team a scoring threat on the other side. Katie Gielas OH Elevation 16 Goller: Gielas –

Read More »

MEQ: Preview and Predictions (FREE)

Let’s take a look at the upcoming Mideast Qualifier this Fri-Sun in Indianapolis. It’s a bit different than past years in that the feature ages are just 16s and up. The 15s are no longer part of this weekend and have moved to their own weekend. As it stands, that leaves us seeing how 16-18 Open might play out in Indy as teams continue their qualifying schedule. 18 OPEN Number of Teams: 48 Number of Bids Available: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (14): 1st Alliance 18 Gold; AVC Cle 18 Red; Circle City 18 Purple; CUVC 18 Titan; EC Power 18 Royal; Metro 18 Travel; Mintonette Sports m.81; MKE Sting 18 Gold; MN Select 18-1; OT 18 John; Paramount 18 VBC; Skyline 18 Royal; Triangle 18 Black; VC United 18 Elite vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (21): 8. AVC Cle 18 Red 9. 1st Alliance 18 Gold 10. Mintonette Sports m.81 13. Skyline 18 Royal 14. A5 18 Marc 15. Circle City 18 Purple 16. Metro 18 Travel 19. Legacy 18-1 Adidas 20. Adidas KiVA 18 Red 22. OT 18 John 23. Tri-State Elite 18 Blue 24. Paramount 18 VBC 30. Elevation 18 Spinney 31. MN Select 18-1 33. NKYVC 18-1 Tsunami 36. Topeka Impact 18-1 37. MKE Sting 18 Gold 39. FC Elite 18 Elite 40. Triangle 18 Black 45. Union 18-1 UA 47. VC United 18-1   5-Star Athletes To Know Brooke Bultema MB Elevation 18 Spinney (Kentucky) Eloise Brandewie MB Mintonette Sports m.81 (Ohio State) Nya Bunton OH/MB Adidas KiVA 18 Red (Texas) Ava Sarafa S Mich Elite 18 Mizuno (Kentucky) Jurnee Robinson OH A5 18 Mizuno (LSU) Stella Swenson S MN Select 18-1 (Minnesota, 2024)   4-Star Athletes To Know Gabby Dean MB Adidas KiVA 18 Red (Illinois) Allison Cavanaugh RS OT 18 John (Georgia) Kate Simington MB MN Select 18-1 (Clemson) Olivia Swenson OH MN Select 18-1 (Minnesota, 2024) Zeta Washington MB OT 18 John (Cincinnati) Safi Hampton OH Metro 18 Travel (North Carolina) Milan Rex S Metro 18 Travel (UCSB) Laurece Abraham MB Legacy 18-1 Adidas (Yale) Lauryn Bowie RS Mintonette Sports m.81 (Virginia) Kate Thibault L/DS MN Select 18-1 (Oregon) Ceci Gooch RS Skyline 18 Royal (Georgia) Gigi Navarrete L/DS 1st Alliance 18 Gold (Northwestern) Jordan Dailey MB Triangle 18 Black (Kentucky) Brielle Kemavor MB Metro 18 Travel (BYU) Kennedy Wagner OH 1st Alliance 18 Gold (Clemson) Erin Kline S Legacy 18-1 Adidas (Mississippi State) Harley Kreck S Skyline 18 Royal (Baylor) Becca Kelley OH Skyline 18 Royal (Oregon) Brooklyn DeLeye OH Topeka Impact 18-1 (Kentucky) Kaia Caffee MB MN Select 18-1 (2024)   Outlook/Prediction: These later qualifiers for the 18s are getting a bit ridiculous. With 16 qualifiers on the schedule and most already played, we see a whopping 14 teams in the field which have already qualified. It’s even more than the 11 we saw with bids last weekend at the Red Rock Rave. Trickle down only goes to eighth place so it’s possible we don’t see a single team qualify and three more at-large bids created. Legacy 18-1 Adidas, at No. 19, and No. 20 Adidas KiVA 18 Red are the two highest-ranked teams without bids. KiVA is interesting because it usually doesn’t play in qualifiers but has the past two seasons at MEQ. This KiVA group is good enough to finish in the Top 8 and qualify. Legacy has some big wins and a few questionable losses, so Legacy can go either way. At No. 23, Tri-State Elite 18 Blue is playing its lone qualifier this season but will be challenged to finish in the Top 8. Elevation 18 Spinney – ranked No. 30 nationally – is coming off its victory at Bluegrass and doesn’t have a bid. Elevation could possible sneak into the Top 8. In the end, A5 beats OT John for gold. KiVA finishes Top 8 and qualifies. Two at-large bids go back into the field. *** 17 OPEN Number of Teams: 48 Number of Bids Available: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (3): Dynasty 17 Black; Metro 17 Travel; Triangle 17 Black vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (17): 2. Dynasty 17 Black 5. Triangle 17 Black 7. 1st Alliance 17 Gold 8. Co Jrs 17 Kevin 9. NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami 11. Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 17. KC Power 17 Black 19. Metro 17 Travel 21. Academy 17 Tsunami 25. Miami Hype 17 Emilio 27. Skyline 17 Royal 31. AVC Cle 17 Red 37. Elevation 17 Ulland 38. Circle City 17 Purple 40. Adidas KiVA 17 Red 41. Boiler Jrs 17 Gold 50. Team Pineapple 17 Black   5-Star Athletes To Know Morgan Gaerte OH Team Pineapple 17 Black (Notre Dame) Emerson Sellman Metro 17 Travel (Ohio State) Izzy Starck S/RS Co Jrs 17 Kevin (Penn State) Allie Shondell S Boiler Jrs 17 Gol (Purdue) Cy Rae Campbell MB Dynasty 17 Black (Wake Forest) Carlie Cisneros OH Dynasty 17 Black (Arizona) Skyler Pierce OH Dynasty 17 Black (Nebraska) Reese Messer S Dynasty 17 Black (2025) Abigail Mullen RS Dynasty 17 Black (2025) Ryan Hunter RS Triangle 17 Black (2025) Lameen Mambu Metro 17 Travel (2025)   4-Star Athletes To Know Ellie White S/OH 1st Alliance 17 Gold (Michigan) Grace Nelson OH 1st Alliance 17 Gold (Kansas) Asia Thigpen OH Triangle 17 Black (Kentucky) Kiarrah Horne OH Triangle 17 Black Ashlyn Philpot OH Triangle 17 Black (Illinois) Emily Bobbitt S Triangle 17 Black (Iowa State) Calli Kenny S/RS 1st Alliance 17 Gold Riley Whitlock RS Boiler Jrs 17 Gold Mya Ball S Team Pineapple 17 Black (Central Florida) Paityn Chapman OH Co Jrs 17 Kevin (Tennessee) Mallory Bohl MB Legacy 17-1 Adidas (Norte Dame) Janelle Green S KC Power 17-1 (Cincinnati) Erin Debiec S Metro 17 Travel (Colorado State) Elizabeth Tabeling L/DS NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami (Ball State) Julia Hunt MB NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami (Washington) Alaleh Tolliver OH Academy 17 Tsunami Alexis Maesch RS Circle City 17 Purple Ryan McAleer L/DS Dynasty 17 Black (Purdue) Jada Ingram MB Dynasty 17 Black (UNLV) Jordan Smith RS Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite (2025) Maya Witherspoon OH Rockwood Thunder 17

Read More »

MEQ 17O: TAV On Top; Drive Nation, Legacy Bid Too

While previously qualified Circle City 17 Purple was going for its fifth championship of 2022, the rest of the 17 Open field was looking to gain one of the three available bids at MEQ. Those went to TAV 17 Black – the event winner – Drive Nation 17 Red and Legacy 17-1 Adidas. We recap the top four’s weekend in Indy below. 15 Open Recap 16 Open Recap All MEQ Coverage TAV 17 BLACK (FIRST, 10-0) Day 1: d Supernova 17 All Stars 25-15, 25-11; d Boiler Jrs 17 Gold 25-13, 25-15; d GP 17 Rox 25-14, 25-17 Day 2: MKE Sting 17 Gold 25-23, 25-20; d MAVS 816 17-1 25-22, 25-12; d MN Select 17-1 27-25, 25-16 Day 3: d Mintonette Sports m.71 25-15, 25-13; d MAVS KC 17-1 25-14, 25-16; d Drive Nation 17 Red 25-23, 25-17; d Circle City 17 Purple 25-23, 17-25, 16-14   The only real statement made comes at the end of the season at Junior Nationals. With that said, if TAV 17 Black wanted to steal the spotlight and shine it on itself it did just that after downing Circle City 17 Purple in the 17 Open final at MEQ. With Circle City owning a victory over Triple Crown champion A5 Mizuno 17 Jing, the Hoosier region club has been viewed as the top team in the division much of the season and was riding a 44-match winning streak into the final against TAV. “Getting a bid was nice but the main goal of being here was to win the whole thing,” TAV assistant coach Clayton Bristow said. “I think a couple of the girls have chips on their shoulders because they have not been getting the same recognition as the outside on Circle City. That was a little extra added incentive.” With Circle City previously qualifying at NEQ, TAV wrapped up its bid by winning its gold pool matches over Mintonette Sports m.71 and MAVS KC 17-1 in straight sets. It set up a showdown with fellow North Texas region foe Drive Nation 17 Red. TAV swept that one in impressive fashion. “Against Drive Nation everything came together,” Bristow said. “We were blocking well. We were passing well. We were terminating early and often. That’s the best we played all season and it came at the right time.” With 9 players in vballrecruiter.com’s Class of 2023 player rankings, TAV is loaded led by five-star recruit and outside Kyndal Stowers. Middle Hannah Pfiffner and setter Audrey Clark are four-star recruits. Right sides Stephanie Gutierrez and Kamille Gibson, outside Sydney Breon, middle Kate Hansen and defenders McKenna Gildon, and Zoe Winford are all three-star recruits. “Just getting better at the little things like passing, defense, hitting,” Bristow said about how TAV can keep improving. “The simple things like serving well. We’re focused on getting a little better each game we play.” *** CIRCLE CITY 17 PURPLE (SECOND, 9-1) Day 1: d Six Pack 17 25-9, 25-6; MAVA Adidas 17 Select 25-4, 25-17; d Mich Elite 17 Mizuno 25-10, 25-10 Day 2: NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami 25-17, 25-6; d CHAVC 17 Black 25-12, 25-14; d Mintonette Sports m.71 25-18, 25-23 Day 3: d MN Select 17-1 27-25, 25-22; d Academy 17 Diamond 25-15, 20-25, 15-7; d Legacy 17-1 Adidas 25-19, 25-21; l TAV 17 Black 25-23, 17-25, 16-14   Central Zones, President’s Day Classic, Bluegrass and NEQ. Those are all of Circle City 17 Purple’s major tournament titles to date. The home club was looking to add another at MEQ but had to settle for runner up after seeing its 44-match winning streak halted by TAV 17 Black in the 17 Open final. “We’ll have some takeaways and use it to improve in some areas,” Circle City coach Chris Due said. “We need to get used to the speed of the game a little more. TAV has been getting a lot better this year as well. They had some bumps early but they are starting to play at a high level and very consistently.” Despite not playing at Triple Crown, Circle City still managed to put a target on its back. And even with teams coming for them, Circle City was not folding as it stood tall most of the time at MEQ. It was walloping opponents until getting a close sweep over MN Select 17-1 to open gold pool play. Then, Academy 17 Diamond pushed Circle City to three in the next one. Circle City regained its form in sweeping Legacy 17-1 Adidas in the semis ahead of facing TAV. “I thought overall we played pretty well this weekend,” Due said. “We were tough with our service pressure overall and that really helped. When we are serving tough and passing well we are very tough to beat.” At the center of what Circle City does is vballrecruiter.com five-star recruit and outside Chloe Chicoine. Her phenomenal talent is always on display. She’s teamed up with four three-star recruits in right side Quinci Thomas, middle Ella Chapman, outside Ava Smith and libero Molly Urban. They still have one qualifier left in Windy City, where the group could triple-qualify so to speak as well as begin a new streak. “The girls really enjoy it,” Due said. “They enjoy volleyball in general and enjoy each other. We’ve had a successful season so far. We had won 44 matches in a row before that one in the final. They are working hard all the time and are really improving.” *** DRIVE NATION 17 RED (T-THIRD, 8-1) Day 1: d VC United 17 Elite 25-11, 25-19; d L2 17-1 25-20, 25-10; d CHAVC 17 Black 25-22, 25-13 Day 2: Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 25-10, 25-18; d Six Pack 17 25-14, 25-10; d AVC Cle Rox 17 Red 25-18, 25-19 Day 3: d Rev 17 Raptors 25-16, 25-18; d Northern Lights 17-1 25-18, 25-18; l TAV 17 Black 25-23, 25-17 After finishing in second at Triple Crown certainly Drive Nation 17 Red came to MEQ as one of the top contenders

Read More »

MEQ 16O: Dynasty Rolls On; 3 Others Qualify

Dynasty 16 Black was previously qualified after taking home the title last weekend at Northern Lights and added yet another championship after finishing on top of the 16 Open field. With trickle down in place, there was no need for the third-place match to decide the final bid, thus runner-up 1st Alliance 16 Gold and third-place finishers KC Power 16-1 and OT 16 Jason grabbed the three available bids. We recap all four teams’ weekend below. DYNASTY 16 BLACK (FIRST, 10-0) Day 1: d Sky High 25-13, 25-22; d Evolution Ohio 25-11, 25-9; Team Indiana Elite 16-1 25-15, 25-12 Day 2: d MAVS KC 16-1 25-12, 25-16; d Legacy 16-1 Adidas 25-14, 25-18; d Upward Stars 16 Amy 25-11, 25-19 Day 3: d Boiler Jrs 16 Gold 25-10, 25-21; d Six Pack 16 25-19, 25-11; d KC Power 16-1 25-16, 25-21; d 1st Alliance 16 Gold 25-12, 25-13 Teams are struggling to take a set off of Dynasty 16 Black let alone beating what is now a three-time champion so far in 2022. The Triple Crown champs have kept it rolling. First, by winning and qualifying at Northern Lights. Next, by capturing 16 Open at MEQ this past weekend in Indy. TAV 16 Black is the only opponent to top Dynasty during that stretch. And Dynasty was able to return the favor by toppling TAV in Minneapolis. In that span, Madfrog 16 Green, MN Select 16-1 and Skyline 16 Royal are the only other clubs to earn a set victory against Dynasty, which swept through its competition in Indy by allowing teams to reach 20 or more points in just three sets. That included downing 1st Alliance 16 Gold, 25-12, 25-13, in the 16 Open final. “The goal is to win every qualifier we can,” Dynasty coach Cassie Rockers said. “That’s our goal. We’re focused on getting better and if you’re not making the gold pools on Day 3 you’re not facing the best competition. We want to prepare ourselves the best we can for nationals.” In reality, it’s more likely to be opponents who are trying to best prepare to face Dynasty at nationals eventually. Through Triple Crown, Northern Lights and now MEQ, Dynasty has gone 6-0 against qualified teams and still has Show Me and Windy City on the schedule. “It went really well,” Rockers said of the weekend in Indy. “We have a thing where we like to start off slow on Day 1 and get progressively better every day. By Day 3 we were really gelling with each other. I’m proud of them. After winning Triple Crown and already having our Open bid it could have been easy for them to roll over and not play our game but they didn’t.” If there are holes, they are hard to exploit. Dynasty is as a complete of a team as there is in the division. It includes three vballrecruiter.com five-star athletes in freshman setter Reese Messer, freshman right side Abigail Mullen and sophomore outside Skyler Pierce. Plus, two four-star recruits in libero Ryan McAleer and outside Carlie Cisneros. Middle Jada Ingram is a three-star recruit. There’s also Piper Newton and Saida Jacobs who fill out the middle spots on the roster. The team doesn’t lack for offense but really hits its stride when clicking on defense. The blocking proved phenomenal in the victory over 1st Alliance in the final. “That was one big focus is being solid in the front row with our blocking,” Rockers said. “We are getting better with our eye work and getting way better closing blocks and building a wall. It’s fun. One of the big things is our defense gelling. When we are making awesome digs and blocking in the front row we have a lot of success. When that’s not happening we have to rely solely on our offense and it doesn’t always go the way we want it to.” *** 1ST ALLIANCE 16 GOLD (SECOND, 7-3) Day 1: l TVC 16 Black 28-26, 18-25, 18-16; d MAVA Adidas 16 Select 25-15, 25-11; d Boiler Jrs 16 Gold 25-18, 25-17 Day 2: d Mintonette Sports m.61 25-16, 25-19; l MKE Sting 16 Gold 23-25, 25-22, 15-12; d KC Power 16-1 18-25, 25-19, 15-13 Day 3: d NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami 25-14, 17-25, 15-13; d Circle City 16 Purple 27-25, 25-12; d OT 16 Jason 26-24, 25-18; l Dynasty 16 Black 25-12, 25-13 After losing to MKE Sting 16 Gold in Day 2 pool play 1st Alliance 16 Gold – playing in its first qualifier of the season at MEQ – faced a moment of truth in its next contest against KC Power 16-1. 1st Alliance was facing elimination with a loss in that one. The way KC Power took the opening set it was looking bleak for the Great Lakes club. However, there was another ending to be written. 1st Alliance came back, winning in three, 18-25, 25-19, 15-13, and kept it going from there. The next day began with qualifying-clinching victories over NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami – the Triple Crown runner up and a team that beat 1st Alliance at that tournament – and Circle City 16 Purple in gold pool play. That effort propelled 1st Alliance into the semis. A bid in hand, 1st Alliance took care of one of the other qualifiers in OT 16 Jason in one semis match before going down to Dynasty 16 Black in the championship. “Overall, we had a really great tournament,” 1st Alliance coach Trish Samolinski said. “We paced ourselves with the tournament and we were just looking to getter. We had a tough final match against a really good Dynasty team. We beat some fantastic teams to get there and they should be proud of where we finished.” 1st Alliance can do some different things with its lineup but one of its mainstays is running Calli Kenny and Ellie White in a 6-2 with both hitting across the front row. Grace Nelson is the go-to on the left and is involved in

Read More »

MEQ: Right Sides Who Stepped Up

With the 2022 version of MEQ in the books, we take a look back at some of the talented players who caught our attention during the three days of action in Indy. These are players we noticed and who were playing well while we were observing them. We put a heavy, heavy focus on the younger groups in 15-17 Open, though a few might be mentioned from 18 Open. Below are the right sides who impressed us. 15 Open Hannah Kenny, Setter/Right Side, 1st Alliance 15 Gold – What a gamer Kenny is! She’s a sparkplug whatever she’s doing on the court and brings an edge to the lineup with her intensity. She has very nice touch and hands as a setter. And though 5-8, she does jump well which allows her to be a successful attacker. 1st Alliance is lucky to have her. Kirra Musgrove, Setter/Right Side, HJV 15 Elite – A 6-1 two-way player for HJV, Musgrove plays with a calmness to her. She’s steady on the set and a lefty with a nice swing on offense. Logan Parks, Setter/Right Side, MAVS KC 15-1 – This 5-11 stud is electric and if you’re passing her court need to take a moment and watch. She’s smooth with her sets and has great location with them. She’s also a strong and springy hitter who can bring it to defenses. Her ceiling is high! 16 OPEN Aspen Maxwell, Right Side, HJV 16 Elite – Maxwell can get up! When she does she can send balls down with authority. Her blocking can also be shutdown at times. She should make someone very happy down the road! Isabelle Poehlein, Right Side, Team Indiana 16.1 – Here’s another player we’re watching for and seeing how she develops. There’s potential there with her 6-2 frame and nice arm swing. Mackenzie Wagner, Right Side, Union 16 UA – We like Wagner. She’s a springy, wirey, whippy lefty who lets loose when the opportunity presents itself. Jillian Huckabey, Right Side, KC Power 16-1 – There’s deception to this 5-11 right side’s game. She doesn’t look like she can hit like she does! But Huckabey can get up and unleash with force. She’s a key part of the KC Power offense, getting set in the back row as well. Abigail Mullen, Right Side, Dynasty 16 Black – As much as defenses need to worry about the outsides coming at them, they cannot forget about Mullen on the right. This freshman playing up is 6-3 with a physical attack. She’s also can be a pain for opposing outsides looking to score with her sound blocking. What an impact she makes! Bailey Higgins, Right Side, OT 16 Jason – Higgins has the ability to be a game changer on the right side. This lefty is equipped with legs that lift her high and an arm that launches shots with ease. 17 OPEN Sydney Schnichels, Right Side, MN Select 17-1 – This 6-4 right side helps make up a tall unit for MN Select. A Minnesota commit, MN Select looks to get Schnichels involved in a variety of ways with her attacking skills, including running her on the X to keep defenses guessing.  Jordyn Dailey, Right Side, CHAVC 17 Black – Committed to Kentucky, Dailey has all the physical gifts in her 6-2 frame. She’s lengthy and leaps high when she’s on the attack. If she puts it all together she could be special at the next level. Lauryn Bowie, Right Side, Mintonette Sports m.71 – Committed to Virginia, Bowie has lots of upside. She’s 6-2 and adds physicality to any lineup on the right. Quinci Thomas, Right Side, Circle City 17 Purple – A Xavier commit, Thomas really helps out Circle City’s offense when she’s on the right. At 6-1 and able to score consistently, she spreads out the attack so Circle City isn’t so left-side heavy. Ceci Gooch, Right Side, Drive Nation 17 Red – Gooch could end up being a steal of a recruit for Michigan. She’s 6-3 and can play in the middle though she is a right side for Drive Nation. With her length she can be tough to slow down when she goes up for the kill. Betsy Goodenow, Right Side, MAVS KC 17-1 – On her way to Yale next year, this 6-0 lefty is going to do damage in the Ivy League! She hits with some serious pop and is a huge part of MAVS’ offense. 18 OPEN Alexa Markley, Right Side, A5 Mizuno 18-Marc – Markley was raw talent when she was younger but the potential was always easy to see. She’s 6-2 and touches 10-3. That mixed with her high-level game it’s no wonder she’s headed to a program like Penn State. Kennedy Martin, Right Side, FC Elite 18 Elite – We’re excited to see what Martin does at the next level. She’s 6-6 and touches 10-8, so she puts up a giant block on the right side. Florida landed an impactful player with her. Frances Torres-Esperanza, Right Side, Metro 18 Travel – This 6-0 right side is playing up in age as she’s a junior. Her blocking was huge for Metro. She’s committed to Colgate. Caroline Jurevicius, Right Side, AVC Clev Rox 18 Red – Jurevicius, with her pure athleticism, has played up an age group for years. She’s a six-rotation right side and at 6-3 can easily do it all at this level. She’s committed to Nebraska.

Read More »

MEQ: Liberos Who Balled Out

With the 2022 version of MEQ in the books, we take a look back at some of the talented players who caught our attention during the three days of action in Indy. These are players we noticed and who were playing well while we were observing them. We put a heavy, heavy focus on the younger groups in 15-17 Open, though a few might be mentioned from 18 Open. Below are the liberos who impressed us. 15 OPEN Callie Krueger, Libero, Austin Skyline 15 Royal – Krueger is a gamer and a lights-out passer. Teams won’t challenge her in serve receive and she keeps her share of rallies going with her hustle. She’s part of the reason Austin Skyline has its Open bid already. Ava Young, Libero, 1st Alliance 15 Gold – It looks like it’s hard to rattle Young. She’s so calm and collected! She’s part of a strong passing group and her ball skills are on point. Hadley Porter, Libero, Dynasty 15 Black – If you think you can get to Porter, it’s wise to think again. She’s a rock in the back row and makes it look effortless at times. MyliBlue Anderson, Libero, Skyline 15 Royal – A steady passer in serve receive, opponents were reluctant to go at her. She was also making plays and keeping rallies alive. 16 OPEN Alice Volpe, Libero, HJV 16 Elite – It’s wise to keep the ball away from Volpe. She’ll make the play if it’s there with steady consistency. Zoe Cooper, Libero, Union 16 UA – Union produces some of the best ball control and defensive teams in the nation year in and year out. On this squad it’s Cooper carrying the tradition of strong liberos. She’s rarely out of position and just as rarely misses her mark. Elizabeth Tabeling, Libero, NKYVC 16 Tsunami – Tabeling fits the mold of some of the typical liberos NKYVC has cranked out. She covers the court well. She passes dimes. Just steady with what she does. Mya Bolton, Libero, KC Power 16-1 – Bolton is unflappable. She’s talkative on the court and always communicating. Her passing is consistent. And she can pass half the court in serve receive. Ryan McAleer, Libero, Dynasty 16 Black – There’s really not a weakness on Dynasty, with McAleer aptly handling the libero duties. She has range and great ball skills. Samantha Falk, Libero, 1st Alliance 16 Gold – What we saw of Falk she looked her best in the semis against KC Power. She was getting everything up and covering the touch blocks very well. Alleigh Dutton, Libero, Circle City 16 Purple – We like the range Dutton plays with. She can make up ground with her quickness and is consistent with her passing. 17 OPEN Sydney Breissinger, Libero, Elevation 17 Goller – Breissinger – committed to Creighton – owns the back row for Elevation. She passes and defends with ease! Laney Choboy, Libero, Academy 17 Diamond – A total top-notch libero. Choboy – who is committed to Minnesota – brings a next-level athleticism to the position. She absolutely flies around the court and is always willing to sacrifice her body to extend rallies. She’s an absolute joy to watch! Zoe Winford, Libero, TAV 17 Black – Winford switched off at libero throughout the weekend but arguably turned in her best performance in the final against TAV. She was a wall in the back row, picking off some huge swings from Circle City’s powerful outsides. McKenna Gildon, Libero, TAV 17 Black – Gildon took turns between libero and DS throughout the weekend. She definitely had her moments and was playing particularly well on Day 2 when we saw her. Alayna Pearson, Libero, KC Power 17-1 – This Texas AM recruit can get around the court in a hurry. She makes up ground quick and covers well. She was one of the more exciting liberos to watch! 18 OPEN Emma Farrell, libero, A5 Mizuno 18-Marc: Farrell has been one of the top liberos in her class since her younger days in club. She’s committed to Wake Forest where she’s sure to continue to star. Saige Damrow, libero, FC Elite 18 Elite – Long one of the top liberos in the Class of 2023, Damrow is on her way to defending national champion Wisconsin. Nothing gets by this junior on her watch. Samiha Foster, Libero, Metro 18 Travel – This smooth libero always seems to get her platform on the ball. She’s headed to West Virginia.

Read More »

MEQ: Impressive Outsides (Part 2)

With the 2022 version of MEQ in the books, we take a look back at some of the talented players who caught our attention during the three days of action in Indy. These are players we noticed and who were playing well while we were observing them. We put a heavy, heavy focus on the younger groups in 15-17 Open, though a few are mentioned from 18 Open. Below is Part 2 of the outside hitters who impressed us. 15 Open Lauren Lopez, Outside, Dynasty 15 Black – It can be tough for blockers to time Lopez. She gets up quickly and can generate pace on her attacks. When Dynasty needs a point it’ll be looking for Lopez. Grace Kreutz, Outside, Adversity 15 Purple – A solid all-around outside. She passes sound. She can score. And she serves bullets at times too. Adversity has a good one in her. Emma Koceja, Outside, MKE Sting 15 Gold – Sting is definitely looking to get this 6-0 outside the ball. She’s springy off the floor and isn’t afraid to let it go. She’d make a few highlight reels! Addison Tindall, Outside, Team Pineapple 15 Black – At 6-2 you can’t miss Tindall on the outside. She moves well. Has a big arm. And hits up high. She has future star written all over her! Logan Bell, Outside, Circle City 15 Purple – At 5-11, Bell can’t necessarily go over the top of blockers but she’s a smart hitter with a lively arm. Isabella Ocampo, Outside, Skyline 15 Royal – Ocampo is a steady six-rotation outside for Skyline. She covers well in the back row and at a 5-10 has a knack for scoring with heady shots. 16 Open Carlie Cisneros, Outside, Dynasty 16 Black – Cisneros does everything above average. At 6-0, she can get on top of the ball. She’s a smart hitter who seemingly scores every time she swings. She passes well. We could go on but we are trying to keep it short! Skyler Pierce, Outside, Dynasty 16 Black – Just about everyone already knows about Pierce. She’s a 6-2 future star who punishes defenses in many ways, especially when the block is late to set up and she crushes it straight down. You’ll be hearing a lot about her for years to come! Taylor Bedinghaus, Outside, OT 16 Jason – A very sound, well-rounded outside is Bedinghaus. She hits out of the back row and is even strong on the attack when she’s up front. Hannah Hankerson, Outside, OT 16 Jason – Hankerson is a bit undersized but that doesn’t her slow her one bit. She’s explosive when she elevates. She’s fearless with a hard, aggressive swing challenging blockers. Alaleh Tolliver, Outside, Academy 16 Yeti – Tolliver is the go-to and the one Academy relies on for a point when it needs one. At 5-11, she has a nice jump and can make plays out of the back row as well. Ava Utterback, Outside, Circle City 16 Purple – When Utterback has it going on she’s as tough to stop as anybody. She’s 6-0 and touches 10-0 and unleashes some big, aggressive swings. It makes her fun to watch! Alec Rothe, Outside, EliteVBTC 16 Black – There’s no telling how far Rothe could go. She has potential written all over her. She seems even longer than her height of 6-2 and carries a smooth arm. We’ll definitely be following along! Payton Petersen, Outside, Six Pack 16 – One thing we noticed about this 6-0 outside beyond her strong attack was Petersen was getting lots of touches on balls at the net blocking. 17 Open Ava Smith, Outside, Circle City 17 Purple – Circle City has tons of firepower on the left with Chloe Chicoine and Smith. At 6-1 and touching 10-1, Smith can tee off and score with authority. She remains uncommitted but we are eagerly awaiting where she eventually lands! Kyndal Stowers, Outside, TAV 17 Black – Stowers is another one of those players we can go on and on about. The 5-11 outside is committed to Baylor. She’s smooth and effortless and can punish balls to the floor. It’s no wonder why she’s one of the top recruits in the class! Emily Simmons, Outside, TAV 17 Black – This 5-10 outside was the unsung hero during TAV’s victory over Circle City in the 17 Open final. She took some key swings on the left and had it working down the line to help carry TAV to victory. Harper Murray, Outside, Legacy 17-1 Adidas – This 6-1 outside deserves paragraphs written about her and her play. In hopes of keeping it brief she’s just a flat-out stud who can take over matches at will. She’ll fit it nicely at Nebraska! Nina Horning, Outside, Legacy 17-1 Adidas – This 6-4 outside is committed to Cincinnati and brings much balance to the Legacy outside. She’s primarily a three-rotation player and with her size she can help carry the offense when she’s in the front. 18 Open Sydney Jackwin, Outside, OT 18 Chad – Another undersized player for OT in the world of 18s yet this LA tech commit is a gamer. We love her scrappiness and competitiveness she brings to the lineup. Laila Ivey, Outside, Metro 18 Travel – You can’t help but notice Ivey on the outside. This Maryland commit is a serious flyer who gets up with the best of them.

Read More »

MEQ: Impressive Outsides (Part 1)

With the 2022 version of MEQ in the books, we take a look back at some of the talented players who caught our attention during the three days of action in Indy. These are players we noticed and who were playing well while we were observing them. We put a heavy, heavy focus on the younger groups in 15-17 Open, though a few are mentioned from 18 Open. Below is Part 1 of the outside hitters who impressed us. 15 OPEN Gabriella DiVita, Outside, Legacy 15-1 Adidas – It’s hard to believe DiVita is an eighth-grader! This 6-0 outside already possesses a whippy arm and is aggressive on the attack with it. Watch out for her making her way through the ranks! Abby Vander Wal, Outside, 1st Alliance 15 Gold – This 6-3 outside is on everyone’s radar. The sky is the limit with her seemingly endless frame and ability to put it to good work with a strong attack that blockers have trouble slowing down. Definitely a rising star! Mariah Gaines, Outside, OPVC 15 Wagner – OPVC didn’t break pool but did push OT 15 Randy to three games with Gaines doing her thing. She can explode off the ground with her springy legs, brings a strong attack and can hit out of the back. Glad we didn’t miss her! Zoe Baliva, Outside, HPSTL 15 Royal – Part of a strong outside combo for HPSTL, Baliva looks like an up and comer. Her jump on her attack looks effortless, her swing is solid and she can score consistently. Hannah Leftridge, Outside, HPSTL 15 Royal – A bit undersized at 5-9, Leftridge is a scrappy gamer who is just a solid player in lots of areas. She can hit front and back row and has sound ball control skills. Every team could use a player like her. Kennedi Rogers, Outside, HJV 15 Elite – Rogers, who is 5-10, plays with tons of energy and effort. She can get up and blast off on balls. She’s also a scrapper on defense who can keep rallies alive with her defense. Pay attention to her as she continues her career! Taylor Cripe, Outside, Boilers Jrs 15 Gold – A fiery outside, Cripe is a gamer. She’s an aggressive attacker who isn’t afraid to let loose and go for it. She’s the go-to outside and doesn’t back down. 16 OPEN Cayla Cogan, Outside, Legacy 16-1 Adidas – Listed at 5-9, Cogan is the smallest offensive player listed on Legacy’s roster but don’t let that size fool you. She gets off the ground and up in the air with ease! She fits in nicely in the Legacy attack. Audrey Geer, Outside, Legacy 16-1 Adidas – Another outside with a nice bounce to her step. Geer gets up and at it with her lively arm. Defenses better be on their toes! Grace Nelson, Outside, 1st Alliance 16 Gold – Looking at Nelson with her slender frame and thinking she’s not a threat is a big mistake. This girl has an explosive attack! She gets up and bangs it with her lively arm and aggressive swing. She’s a fun one to watch! Melia Johnson, Outside, MKE Sting 16 Gold – Sting has some size on the roster, including this 6-2 outside. Johnson has a powerful arm and can go boom! Morgan Gaerte, Outside, Team Pineapple 16 Black – We can’t wait to see Gaerte at the next level. At 6-5, she’s a coach’s dream. She carries a smooth swing and is only going to get better and better. Make sure she’s on your radar! Alea Goolsby, Outside, KC Power 16-1 – It’s hard to believe Goolsby is just a freshman! Talk about power, she’s an absolute slugger with a hammer for an arm. It’s going to be fun to see where she’s at four years from now! Rachel Van Gorp, Outside, KC Power 16-1 – A state qualifier in long jump you can see it in Van Gorp’s game. At 5-9 she’s not as tall as other outsides. But she can get off the floor and has a deceptive cannon for an arm. Don’t underestimate her! 17 OPEN Makya Clayton, Outside, PVA 17 Elite – We really appreciate Clayton’s game. She’s listed at 5-6 but has as much heart as anyone! A six-rotation outside, she passes well out of serve receive. She also just explodes on the attack when called for. She’s a smart attacker, who not only can let it rip but can swipe balls of the block and frustrate blockers who think they have the advantage. Olivia Swenson, Outside, MN Select 17-1 – One of three sophomores playing up for MN Select, this 6-3 outside is going to be a score for some future collegiate program! Cassidy Hartman, Outside, Six Pack 17 – It looked like to us that Hartman was a glue piece for Six Pack. She’s a 6-0 hustler with all-around game. Ella Durham, Outside, Mintonette Sports m.71 – Durham is listed as uncommitted but is going to eventually make some program happy to have landed her. At 6-3, she has a powerful arm and is only improving in her first year with Mintonette. Chloe Chicoine, Outside, Circle City 17 Purple – One could go on and on about this Purdue commit. There isn’t anything she can’t do at a high level. She ridiculously explosive and insanely quick. There’s only a handful to watch who are as entertaining as she is! 18 OPEN Cheridyn Leverette, Outside, A5 Mizuno 18-Marc – Originally a member of A5 South, Leverette joined A5’s main club her 16s season and made an immediate impact. She’s a consistent scorer with her 6-2 frame and touching 10-3. She’s headed to the West Coast to play for UCLA. Ella Demetrician, Outside, FC Elite 18 Elite – It’s hard to believe Demetrician is only a sophomore! This Class of 2024 recruit is 6-2 and is almost touching 10-0. She can bring the heat already and is one to watch out for!

Read More »

MEQ: Gold Medal Rundown

The Bluegrass Tournament was one of many during the opening weekend of March. A KiVA team winning there is a regular and frequent occurrence. It certainly doesn’t shake up the volleyball world the way a KiVA team winning a national qualifier does! When a team like Adidas KiVA 16 Red – ranked No. 23 in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50 National Rankings – finished first at its home event earlier this month, it was a sign the team could be finding its groove. But coming to Indy presented not only much stiffer competition but a scenario where what would KiVA do should it be in position to accept a bid? KiVA hasn’t participated in a USAV national championship since 2005. Yet, with KiVA in contention on the final day a decision would need to be made should KiVA keep advancing. After beating both No. 16 Legacy 16-1 Adidas and No. 43 No Name 16 Sarah, KiVA made the four-team gold bracket. Not long after, so did No. 18 Tribe 16 Elite Cardinal. With Tribe already owning a bid, KiVA – along with No. 11 Circle City 16 Purple and No. 14 MKE Sting 16 Gold – already knew their fates. All three were assured of bids before playing another match. When KiVA coaches confirmed they were accepting the Open bid, a bit of history was made! KiVA is back in a USAV national championship. But, it gets even better. Not only did KiVA qualify, KiVA wasn’t done yet, downing both Tribe and Circle City to finish in first place. KiVA lost on Day 1 to unranked Boiler Jrs 16 Gold and then started Day 2 with a setback to No. 12 Mich Elite 16 Mizuno. KiVA was facing possible elimination in its next match but upset No. 8 A5 16 Gabe and eventually moved on when Mich Elite beat A5. KiVA didn’t lose again, riding its Bluegrass victory to an even bigger triumph in Indy! KiVA open the gold bracket by fending off Tribe in three, 23-25, 25-18, 15-9, before tackling Circle City in the final, 25-23, 28-26. Circle City held off MKE Sting in three, 25-22, 22-25, 15-8, in the other semifinal. Much credit goes to KiVA for turning it on since finishing 58th at Triple Crown last month. It was a tough ending in Kansas City after a promising Day 1 started with victories over Austin Skyline 16 Royal and Madfrog 16 Green. But KiVA was upset by unranked SA Magic 16 Elite to start Day 2 then lost to both AVA TX 16 Adidas and Tulsa Power 16-1 in succession to tumble down the standings. KiVA did lose on Day 1 at Bluegrass to Tri-State Elite 16 Blue in three and picked up key victories over AVC Cle 16 Red and SPVB 16 Elite there as well. While a strong showing, expecting KiVA to make a leap in such a short time like it did at MEQ wouldn’t be fair but what an accomplishment nonetheless. Sting’s qualifying chances hinged on a showdown with Mich Elite for first in their gold pool. Both were 1-0 and needed to win to have any shot at qualifying. Circle City took care of its business, sweeping both Adrenaline 16 Doug and Co Jrs 16 Shannon in its gold pool to advance. As for 17 Open, Co Jrs 17 Kevin’s time in Indy could have hardly gone any better. Ranked No. 8 nationally, Co Jrs is proving itself as a Top-10 team with another impressive performance on a big stage. After tying for fifth at last month’s Triple Crown NIT, Co Jrs’ next national act featured going 10-0 and claiming gold at MEQ. There was not much resistance as Co Jrs swept its way through the first two days of competition before a thrilling Day 3 concluded with gold-medalist Co Jrs being one of three teams to earn bids. The way the drama was playing out offered two paths to qualifying. The straight forward and guaranteed one was reaching the gold bracket. The much riskier one with nothing assured was through the fifth-place bracket. This is what both Co Jrs and No. 37 Elevation 17 Ulland faced as they were going toe-to-toe for first place in Gold Pool 2. The winner was assured a bid because previously-qualified and second-ranked Dynasty 17 Black had already captured first place in its gold pool. But it was not an elimination match as Elevation and Co Jrs would still have another shot at qualifying should they finish second in the pool. That route came courtesy of No. 5 Triangle 17 Black, which even though was entering a third set of its own against No. 21 Academy 17 Tsunami had already clinched first place based on tiebreakers should Triangle lose. More on why this result still mattered in a moment. With both Dynasty and Triangle reaching the gold bracket, the final remaining bid would go to the team finishing fifth and the only way to determine that was to a have a four-team playoff between the second-place gold-pool finishers. Co Jrs squeaked out its victory over Elevation, 23-25, 25-17, 15-13, and joined 1st Alliance 17 Gold in bidding. 1st Alliance was actually the first team to learn its fate after downing both No. 9 NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami and No. 48 Pohaku 17-1 in its gold pool and thus earning its bid once Dynasty won its pool. Once Triangle advanced to the gold bracket with Dynasty, it made every other result relevant as it gave life to the second-place teams. That meant Pohaku beating NKYVC was huge, as Pohaku was still in it. So was Elevation. But unfortunately for Academy it was not. That’s because Academy needed to sweep Triangle in order to advance. Instead, No. 41 Boiler Jrs 17 Gold beating Academy the match prior was huge because Boiler Jrs was part of the fifth-place bracket, which also included No. 17 KC Power 17 Black. Back to Co Jrs for a moment. The only teams to beat Co

Read More »

MEQ: Day 2 Show Stoppers And More

It’s not unusual to see disparity in pools on the second day of a national qualifier, as was the case Saturday at MEQ in Indianapolis. The luck of draw played a factor as teams competed for spots in gold pools on the final day. Let’s look at 16 Open, where Pool 1 was gnarly. Circle City 16 Purple, the top seed overall and ranked No. 11 in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50, went 3-0 on Day 1 and was “rewarded” by drawing both No. 17 Austin Skyline 16 Royal and No. 19 AVC Cle 16 Red. With only room for two, someone was going to be left out. After all three finished tied at 2-1, it was Circle City advancing in first place followed by Austin Skyline in second. Austin Skyline opened the pool with a clutch victory over Circle City but lost control of the pool when it fell to AVC before downing USA South 16 Purple. Circle City earned first by sweeping AVC in the 1 v 2 contest and thus eliminating AVC. Pools 4 and 5 were two more pools that were tougher than others. Pool 4 featured No. 8 A5 16 Gabe, No. 12 Mich Elite 16 Mizuno and No. 23 Adidas KiVA 16 Red. It was another case of one must go and it turned out to be the highest-ranked of the trio in A5, which finished 1-2 after losing to both Mich Elite and KiVA. Mich Elite made it out on top at 3-0, followed by KiVA at 2-1. Somewhat surprisingly, Mich Elite beating KiVA in three sets was the only match of the six from the pool to go the distance. It was No. 14 MKE Sting 16 Gold, No. 16 Legacy 16-1 Adidas and No. 44 GP 16 Rox together in Pool 5. GP had a safety net known as already having a bid which it earned at the Sunshine Classic. It was Sting coming out ahead, grabbing first at 3-0. Legacy followed at 2-1, leaving GP at 1-2 and now out of contention for creating any trickle down. With GP and HPSTL 16 Royal – which went 1-2 on Day 1 and was eliminated – not among Day 3’s gold pools, it leaves No. 18 Tribe 16 Elite Cardinal as the lone previously-qualified team. That’s big in that we now know trickle down in 16 Open can’t exceed fourth place, so teams must win their gold pools at the very least to have a chance at qualifying. Tribe went 3-0 in Pool 6 on Day 3. Some of the other pools in 16 Open opened the door and allowed teams to take advantage. One such case was Pool 3, which was composed of unranked Boiler Jrs 16 Gold, No. 38 Co Jrs 16 Shannon, unranked Adversity 16 Adidas and unranked EliteVBTC 16 Black. It was the No. 4 team in EliteVBTC rising up and going 3-0. Co Jrs was second at 2-1 as both advanced. In Pool 2, No. 15 Dynasty 15 Black and No. 43 No Name 16 Sarah were with unranked foes in CUVC 16 Beast and KC Power 16 Black. While it seemed like Dynasty’s pool to win, it was actually No Name (at 3-0) and CUVC (at 2-1) advancing while Dynasty was knocked out after going 1-2 with losses to both. In 17 Open, it was a different story as the top five seeds combined to go 15-0. Only Pohaku 17-1 lost as the No. 1 team in a pool, but managed to advance still after taking second in a three-way tie at 2-1. Pohaku tied with both No. 11 Rockwood Thunder 16 Elite and No. 21 Academy 17 Tsunami. Rockwood Thunder was the odd team out based on tiebreakers and took third. It makes Rockwood Thunder the highest-ranked team from our Top 50 missing out on gold pools. Both Pools 2 and 5 came down to three-way ties at 1-2 behind the first-place finishers. While No. 8 Co Jrs 17 Kevin went 3-0 in Pool 2, No. 40 Adidas KiVA 17 Red and unranked teams in Michio 17 National and Mintonette Sports m.71 tied at 1-2. KiVA earned second based on the best set percentage of the trio. Second-ranked Dynasty 17 Black went 3-0 in Pool 5, where No. 19 Metro 17 Travel, No. 37 Elevation 17 Ulland and No. 38 Circle City 17 Purple all finished at 1-2 behind Dynasty. Elevation took second on tiebreakers, leaving Metro eliminated. Metro – along with Dynasty and No. 5 Triangle 17 Black – owned a bid prior to MEQ. While Metro being bumped won’t impact Metro it does eliminate another possible trickle-down spot. And with Dynasty and Triangle positioned to win their Day 3 pools, that would have trickle down extend to fifth place. *** DAY 2 SHOW STOPPERS Reese Messer S Dynasty 17 Black: A 5-star recruit from the Class of 2025, Messer is silky smooth with her delivery and sets at a high-level from her hands to her placement. She connects well with all her hitters and moves the ball around as well as any setter. Jada Ingram MB Dynasty 17 Black: A 4-star UNLV commit, Ingram was having a big day in the middle. She seemed close to unstoppable, beating defenders on 1s and slides while banging down balls. Ava Grevengoed OH Michio 17 National: Grevengoed is a bit undersized on the left but takes plenty of swings as one of the main attackers. She has a nice arm and did well helping her team compete against higher-ranked opponents. Gabriella Woltman RS Michio 17 National: Woltman held it down on the right. She adds some power to the lineup and was taking hard swings. Renee Jones RS Metro 17 Travel: Jones – a 3-star recruit – puts up a wall of a block and can be imposing for smaller attackers. She’s also part of the offensive plans, able to deliver points with her lefty swing. Izzy Starck S/RS Co Jrs 17 Kevin: Starck – a 5-star

Read More »

MEQ: Day 1 Show Stoppers And More

With the Red Rock Rave national qualifier ending with Wave 16 Kevin finishing on top of 16 Open, it was one of those What Just Happened?!? moments we all love in volleyball. The latest edition of What Just Happened is on the other end of spectrum unfortunately. It features HPSTL 16 Royal, which started as the No. 2 overall seed in 16 Open at MEQ in Indianapolis. HPSTL is one of three teams already owning an Open bid after earning one at Sunshine Classic. However, after HPSTL was eliminated on Day 1 after going 1-2, the question must be asked, what just happened?!? In the preview I wrote I had a hunch we wouldn’t see any of the qualified teams – GP 16 Rox and Tribe 16 Elite Cardinal being the other two – factoring into any possible trickle down but I hardly thought we would see any of them gone after Day 1? Coming into Sunshine two weeks ago, HPSTL hadn’t taken any poor losses. The main issue was it wasn’t picking up any quality victories either except for one over Austin Skyline 16 Royal and avenging a loss to Tri-State Elite 16 Blue. Both those results happened at Triple Crown. HP picked up big wins at Sunshine over A5 16 Gabe, GP, Tribe, Skyline 16 Royal and Mich Elite 16 Mizuno on its way to qualifying. That not only inspired hope of HPSTL finding its groove, but is what gave HPSTL the No. 2 overall seed here in Indy. It was so shocking I haven’t even mentioned the teams to beat HPSTL yet, which were unranked CUVC 16 Beast and USA South 16 Premier. CUVC went 3-0 as the No. 2 team in the pool to take over the overall No. 2 seed. USA South went 2-1 and grabbed second. Tons of credit to both those clubs for picking up such a quality victory! It was a wild day elsewhere in 16 Open as well, including No. 9 seed Team Pineapple 16 Black eliminated after going 1-2. I actually had Team Pineapple, at No. 29 nationally, ranked one spot ahead of No. 30 HPSTL in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50. Both No. 38 Co Jrs 16 Shannon and unranked Union 16-1 UA upset Team Pineapple. Co Jrs was upset by unranked MOD Elite 16 Blue but still won the pool at 2-1 after finishing in a two-way tie with Union. Adidas KiVA 16 Red – seeded No. 3 overall and ranked No. 23 in the nation – was upset by unranked Boiler Jrs 16 Gold. Boiler Jrs won the pool at 3-0 while KiVA went 2-1. KiVA was not the highest-ranked team to lose from our Top 50 however. Dynasty 16 Black – ranked No. 15 – and No. 17 Austin Skyline 16 Royal were in the same pool on Day 1, so something had to give. Dynasty won the pool at 3-0 as the No. 2 team. Austin Skyline moved on at 2-1 as those two flip seeds. We’ll consider that a win for the national rankings over the seedings. The rest of the top-ranked teams all finished 3-0, including No. 8 A5, No. 11 Circle City 16 Purple, No. 12 Mich Elite, No. 14 MKE Sting 16 Gold, No. 16 Legacy 16-1 Adidas and No. 18 Tribe. The other big news from 16 Open was unranked Adrenaline 16 Doug going 3-0 as the No. 3 team in Pool 8. Adrenaline upset both No. 40 NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami and No. 44 GP. GP went 2-1 and finished second while NKYVC went 1-2 and was knocked out of contention. Also, unranked Adversity 16 Adidas upset No. 31 Alamo 16 Premier in Pool 10. That was key because Adversity advanced as the No. 3 team while Alamo finished 1-2 and was eliminated as the No. 2 team in the pool. The results from 17 Open were not as all over the place. The No. 11 overall seed and No. 1 team in Pool 11 in Alamo 17 Premier went 1-2 and finished in third. Both No. 41 Boiler Jrs 17 Gold and Michio 17 National uprooted Alamo. Boiler Jrs finished 3-0 to win the pool. Considering I don’t have Alamo ranked in the Top 50, it didn’t come as that much of a surprise to see Boiler Jrs win the pool. While Alamo was the only No. 1 team from a pool not to advance, a few No. 2 teams didn’t move on either. Team Pineapple 17 Black – ranked No. 50 – Union 17-1 UA, HPSTL 17 Royal and CHAVC 17 Black all finished at 1-2 as No. 2 teams in their respective pools and are out of contention. A couple of other upsets didn’t eliminate teams but will shake up the seedings for Day 2. Pohaku 17-1, ranked No. 48, took down No. 19 Metro 17 Travel. Metro is one of three teams already owning a bid in the field. Also, No. 37 Elevation 17 Ulland upset No. 21 Academy 17 Tsunami to win Pool 7. Beyond that, the top-ranked teams all fared well. Second-ranked Dynasty 17 Black, No. 5 Triangle 17 Black – both which have bids already – No. 7 1st Alliance 17 Gold, No. 8 Co Jrs 17 Kevin, No. 9 NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami, No. 11 Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite and No. 17 KC Power 17 Black all finished 3-0 and won their respective pools. *** DAY 1 SHOW STOPPERS Larsen Terrill S Mintonette Sports m.61: A 3-star recruit, Terrill is a smooth operator. She locates well on the regular and sets a consistent, clean ball. Callie Krueger L/DS Austin Skyline 16 Royal: Krueger – a 4-star recruit – commands the back row. She showed great range, covered well and was passing dimes. Makayla White MB Austin Skyline 16 Royal: White was making herself known in the middle. She was touching balls blocking and turning around and giving her team a scoring threat on the other side. Katie Gielas OH Elevation 16 Goller: Gielas –

Read More »

MEQ: Preview and Predictions (FREE)

Let’s take a look at the upcoming Mideast Qualifier this Fri-Sun in Indianapolis. It’s a bit different than past years in that the feature ages are just 16s and up. The 15s are no longer part of this weekend and have moved to their own weekend. As it stands, that leaves us seeing how 16-18 Open might play out in Indy as teams continue their qualifying schedule. 18 OPEN Number of Teams: 48 Number of Bids Available: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (14): 1st Alliance 18 Gold; AVC Cle 18 Red; Circle City 18 Purple; CUVC 18 Titan; EC Power 18 Royal; Metro 18 Travel; Mintonette Sports m.81; MKE Sting 18 Gold; MN Select 18-1; OT 18 John; Paramount 18 VBC; Skyline 18 Royal; Triangle 18 Black; VC United 18 Elite vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (21): 8. AVC Cle 18 Red 9. 1st Alliance 18 Gold 10. Mintonette Sports m.81 13. Skyline 18 Royal 14. A5 18 Marc 15. Circle City 18 Purple 16. Metro 18 Travel 19. Legacy 18-1 Adidas 20. Adidas KiVA 18 Red 22. OT 18 John 23. Tri-State Elite 18 Blue 24. Paramount 18 VBC 30. Elevation 18 Spinney 31. MN Select 18-1 33. NKYVC 18-1 Tsunami 36. Topeka Impact 18-1 37. MKE Sting 18 Gold 39. FC Elite 18 Elite 40. Triangle 18 Black 45. Union 18-1 UA 47. VC United 18-1   5-Star Athletes To Know Brooke Bultema MB Elevation 18 Spinney (Kentucky) Eloise Brandewie MB Mintonette Sports m.81 (Ohio State) Nya Bunton OH/MB Adidas KiVA 18 Red (Texas) Ava Sarafa S Mich Elite 18 Mizuno (Kentucky) Jurnee Robinson OH A5 18 Mizuno (LSU) Stella Swenson S MN Select 18-1 (Minnesota, 2024)   4-Star Athletes To Know Gabby Dean MB Adidas KiVA 18 Red (Illinois) Allison Cavanaugh RS OT 18 John (Georgia) Kate Simington MB MN Select 18-1 (Clemson) Olivia Swenson OH MN Select 18-1 (Minnesota, 2024) Zeta Washington MB OT 18 John (Cincinnati) Safi Hampton OH Metro 18 Travel (North Carolina) Milan Rex S Metro 18 Travel (UCSB) Laurece Abraham MB Legacy 18-1 Adidas (Yale) Lauryn Bowie RS Mintonette Sports m.81 (Virginia) Kate Thibault L/DS MN Select 18-1 (Oregon) Ceci Gooch RS Skyline 18 Royal (Georgia) Gigi Navarrete L/DS 1st Alliance 18 Gold (Northwestern) Jordan Dailey MB Triangle 18 Black (Kentucky) Brielle Kemavor MB Metro 18 Travel (BYU) Kennedy Wagner OH 1st Alliance 18 Gold (Clemson) Erin Kline S Legacy 18-1 Adidas (Mississippi State) Harley Kreck S Skyline 18 Royal (Baylor) Becca Kelley OH Skyline 18 Royal (Oregon) Brooklyn DeLeye OH Topeka Impact 18-1 (Kentucky) Kaia Caffee MB MN Select 18-1 (2024)   Outlook/Prediction: These later qualifiers for the 18s are getting a bit ridiculous. With 16 qualifiers on the schedule and most already played, we see a whopping 14 teams in the field which have already qualified. It’s even more than the 11 we saw with bids last weekend at the Red Rock Rave. Trickle down only goes to eighth place so it’s possible we don’t see a single team qualify and three more at-large bids created. Legacy 18-1 Adidas, at No. 19, and No. 20 Adidas KiVA 18 Red are the two highest-ranked teams without bids. KiVA is interesting because it usually doesn’t play in qualifiers but has the past two seasons at MEQ. This KiVA group is good enough to finish in the Top 8 and qualify. Legacy has some big wins and a few questionable losses, so Legacy can go either way. At No. 23, Tri-State Elite 18 Blue is playing its lone qualifier this season but will be challenged to finish in the Top 8. Elevation 18 Spinney – ranked No. 30 nationally – is coming off its victory at Bluegrass and doesn’t have a bid. Elevation could possible sneak into the Top 8. In the end, A5 beats OT John for gold. KiVA finishes Top 8 and qualifies. Two at-large bids go back into the field. *** 17 OPEN Number of Teams: 48 Number of Bids Available: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (3): Dynasty 17 Black; Metro 17 Travel; Triangle 17 Black vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (17): 2. Dynasty 17 Black 5. Triangle 17 Black 7. 1st Alliance 17 Gold 8. Co Jrs 17 Kevin 9. NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami 11. Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 17. KC Power 17 Black 19. Metro 17 Travel 21. Academy 17 Tsunami 25. Miami Hype 17 Emilio 27. Skyline 17 Royal 31. AVC Cle 17 Red 37. Elevation 17 Ulland 38. Circle City 17 Purple 40. Adidas KiVA 17 Red 41. Boiler Jrs 17 Gold 50. Team Pineapple 17 Black   5-Star Athletes To Know Morgan Gaerte OH Team Pineapple 17 Black (Notre Dame) Emerson Sellman Metro 17 Travel (Ohio State) Izzy Starck S/RS Co Jrs 17 Kevin (Penn State) Allie Shondell S Boiler Jrs 17 Gol (Purdue) Cy Rae Campbell MB Dynasty 17 Black (Wake Forest) Carlie Cisneros OH Dynasty 17 Black (Arizona) Skyler Pierce OH Dynasty 17 Black (Nebraska) Reese Messer S Dynasty 17 Black (2025) Abigail Mullen RS Dynasty 17 Black (2025) Ryan Hunter RS Triangle 17 Black (2025) Lameen Mambu Metro 17 Travel (2025)   4-Star Athletes To Know Ellie White S/OH 1st Alliance 17 Gold (Michigan) Grace Nelson OH 1st Alliance 17 Gold (Kansas) Asia Thigpen OH Triangle 17 Black (Kentucky) Kiarrah Horne OH Triangle 17 Black Ashlyn Philpot OH Triangle 17 Black (Illinois) Emily Bobbitt S Triangle 17 Black (Iowa State) Calli Kenny S/RS 1st Alliance 17 Gold Riley Whitlock RS Boiler Jrs 17 Gold Mya Ball S Team Pineapple 17 Black (Central Florida) Paityn Chapman OH Co Jrs 17 Kevin (Tennessee) Mallory Bohl MB Legacy 17-1 Adidas (Norte Dame) Janelle Green S KC Power 17-1 (Cincinnati) Erin Debiec S Metro 17 Travel (Colorado State) Elizabeth Tabeling L/DS NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami (Ball State) Julia Hunt MB NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami (Washington) Alaleh Tolliver OH Academy 17 Tsunami Alexis Maesch RS Circle City 17 Purple Ryan McAleer L/DS Dynasty 17 Black (Purdue) Jada Ingram MB Dynasty 17 Black (UNLV) Jordan Smith RS Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite (2025) Maya Witherspoon OH Rockwood Thunder 17

Read More »

MEQ 17O: TAV On Top; Drive Nation, Legacy Bid Too

While previously qualified Circle City 17 Purple was going for its fifth championship of 2022, the rest of the 17 Open field was looking to gain one of the three available bids at MEQ. Those went to TAV 17 Black – the event winner – Drive Nation 17 Red and Legacy 17-1 Adidas. We recap the top four’s weekend in Indy below. 15 Open Recap 16 Open Recap All MEQ Coverage TAV 17 BLACK (FIRST, 10-0) Day 1: d Supernova 17 All Stars 25-15, 25-11; d Boiler Jrs 17 Gold 25-13, 25-15; d GP 17 Rox 25-14, 25-17 Day 2: MKE Sting 17 Gold 25-23, 25-20; d MAVS 816 17-1 25-22, 25-12; d MN Select 17-1 27-25, 25-16 Day 3: d Mintonette Sports m.71 25-15, 25-13; d MAVS KC 17-1 25-14, 25-16; d Drive Nation 17 Red 25-23, 25-17; d Circle City 17 Purple 25-23, 17-25, 16-14   The only real statement made comes at the end of the season at Junior Nationals. With that said, if TAV 17 Black wanted to steal the spotlight and shine it on itself it did just that after downing Circle City 17 Purple in the 17 Open final at MEQ. With Circle City owning a victory over Triple Crown champion A5 Mizuno 17 Jing, the Hoosier region club has been viewed as the top team in the division much of the season and was riding a 44-match winning streak into the final against TAV. “Getting a bid was nice but the main goal of being here was to win the whole thing,” TAV assistant coach Clayton Bristow said. “I think a couple of the girls have chips on their shoulders because they have not been getting the same recognition as the outside on Circle City. That was a little extra added incentive.” With Circle City previously qualifying at NEQ, TAV wrapped up its bid by winning its gold pool matches over Mintonette Sports m.71 and MAVS KC 17-1 in straight sets. It set up a showdown with fellow North Texas region foe Drive Nation 17 Red. TAV swept that one in impressive fashion. “Against Drive Nation everything came together,” Bristow said. “We were blocking well. We were passing well. We were terminating early and often. That’s the best we played all season and it came at the right time.” With 9 players in vballrecruiter.com’s Class of 2023 player rankings, TAV is loaded led by five-star recruit and outside Kyndal Stowers. Middle Hannah Pfiffner and setter Audrey Clark are four-star recruits. Right sides Stephanie Gutierrez and Kamille Gibson, outside Sydney Breon, middle Kate Hansen and defenders McKenna Gildon, and Zoe Winford are all three-star recruits. “Just getting better at the little things like passing, defense, hitting,” Bristow said about how TAV can keep improving. “The simple things like serving well. We’re focused on getting a little better each game we play.” *** CIRCLE CITY 17 PURPLE (SECOND, 9-1) Day 1: d Six Pack 17 25-9, 25-6; MAVA Adidas 17 Select 25-4, 25-17; d Mich Elite 17 Mizuno 25-10, 25-10 Day 2: NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami 25-17, 25-6; d CHAVC 17 Black 25-12, 25-14; d Mintonette Sports m.71 25-18, 25-23 Day 3: d MN Select 17-1 27-25, 25-22; d Academy 17 Diamond 25-15, 20-25, 15-7; d Legacy 17-1 Adidas 25-19, 25-21; l TAV 17 Black 25-23, 17-25, 16-14   Central Zones, President’s Day Classic, Bluegrass and NEQ. Those are all of Circle City 17 Purple’s major tournament titles to date. The home club was looking to add another at MEQ but had to settle for runner up after seeing its 44-match winning streak halted by TAV 17 Black in the 17 Open final. “We’ll have some takeaways and use it to improve in some areas,” Circle City coach Chris Due said. “We need to get used to the speed of the game a little more. TAV has been getting a lot better this year as well. They had some bumps early but they are starting to play at a high level and very consistently.” Despite not playing at Triple Crown, Circle City still managed to put a target on its back. And even with teams coming for them, Circle City was not folding as it stood tall most of the time at MEQ. It was walloping opponents until getting a close sweep over MN Select 17-1 to open gold pool play. Then, Academy 17 Diamond pushed Circle City to three in the next one. Circle City regained its form in sweeping Legacy 17-1 Adidas in the semis ahead of facing TAV. “I thought overall we played pretty well this weekend,” Due said. “We were tough with our service pressure overall and that really helped. When we are serving tough and passing well we are very tough to beat.” At the center of what Circle City does is vballrecruiter.com five-star recruit and outside Chloe Chicoine. Her phenomenal talent is always on display. She’s teamed up with four three-star recruits in right side Quinci Thomas, middle Ella Chapman, outside Ava Smith and libero Molly Urban. They still have one qualifier left in Windy City, where the group could triple-qualify so to speak as well as begin a new streak. “The girls really enjoy it,” Due said. “They enjoy volleyball in general and enjoy each other. We’ve had a successful season so far. We had won 44 matches in a row before that one in the final. They are working hard all the time and are really improving.” *** DRIVE NATION 17 RED (T-THIRD, 8-1) Day 1: d VC United 17 Elite 25-11, 25-19; d L2 17-1 25-20, 25-10; d CHAVC 17 Black 25-22, 25-13 Day 2: Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 25-10, 25-18; d Six Pack 17 25-14, 25-10; d AVC Cle Rox 17 Red 25-18, 25-19 Day 3: d Rev 17 Raptors 25-16, 25-18; d Northern Lights 17-1 25-18, 25-18; l TAV 17 Black 25-23, 25-17 After finishing in second at Triple Crown certainly Drive Nation 17 Red came to MEQ as one of the top contenders

Read More »

MEQ 16O: Dynasty Rolls On; 3 Others Qualify

Dynasty 16 Black was previously qualified after taking home the title last weekend at Northern Lights and added yet another championship after finishing on top of the 16 Open field. With trickle down in place, there was no need for the third-place match to decide the final bid, thus runner-up 1st Alliance 16 Gold and third-place finishers KC Power 16-1 and OT 16 Jason grabbed the three available bids. We recap all four teams’ weekend below. DYNASTY 16 BLACK (FIRST, 10-0) Day 1: d Sky High 25-13, 25-22; d Evolution Ohio 25-11, 25-9; Team Indiana Elite 16-1 25-15, 25-12 Day 2: d MAVS KC 16-1 25-12, 25-16; d Legacy 16-1 Adidas 25-14, 25-18; d Upward Stars 16 Amy 25-11, 25-19 Day 3: d Boiler Jrs 16 Gold 25-10, 25-21; d Six Pack 16 25-19, 25-11; d KC Power 16-1 25-16, 25-21; d 1st Alliance 16 Gold 25-12, 25-13 Teams are struggling to take a set off of Dynasty 16 Black let alone beating what is now a three-time champion so far in 2022. The Triple Crown champs have kept it rolling. First, by winning and qualifying at Northern Lights. Next, by capturing 16 Open at MEQ this past weekend in Indy. TAV 16 Black is the only opponent to top Dynasty during that stretch. And Dynasty was able to return the favor by toppling TAV in Minneapolis. In that span, Madfrog 16 Green, MN Select 16-1 and Skyline 16 Royal are the only other clubs to earn a set victory against Dynasty, which swept through its competition in Indy by allowing teams to reach 20 or more points in just three sets. That included downing 1st Alliance 16 Gold, 25-12, 25-13, in the 16 Open final. “The goal is to win every qualifier we can,” Dynasty coach Cassie Rockers said. “That’s our goal. We’re focused on getting better and if you’re not making the gold pools on Day 3 you’re not facing the best competition. We want to prepare ourselves the best we can for nationals.” In reality, it’s more likely to be opponents who are trying to best prepare to face Dynasty at nationals eventually. Through Triple Crown, Northern Lights and now MEQ, Dynasty has gone 6-0 against qualified teams and still has Show Me and Windy City on the schedule. “It went really well,” Rockers said of the weekend in Indy. “We have a thing where we like to start off slow on Day 1 and get progressively better every day. By Day 3 we were really gelling with each other. I’m proud of them. After winning Triple Crown and already having our Open bid it could have been easy for them to roll over and not play our game but they didn’t.” If there are holes, they are hard to exploit. Dynasty is as a complete of a team as there is in the division. It includes three vballrecruiter.com five-star athletes in freshman setter Reese Messer, freshman right side Abigail Mullen and sophomore outside Skyler Pierce. Plus, two four-star recruits in libero Ryan McAleer and outside Carlie Cisneros. Middle Jada Ingram is a three-star recruit. There’s also Piper Newton and Saida Jacobs who fill out the middle spots on the roster. The team doesn’t lack for offense but really hits its stride when clicking on defense. The blocking proved phenomenal in the victory over 1st Alliance in the final. “That was one big focus is being solid in the front row with our blocking,” Rockers said. “We are getting better with our eye work and getting way better closing blocks and building a wall. It’s fun. One of the big things is our defense gelling. When we are making awesome digs and blocking in the front row we have a lot of success. When that’s not happening we have to rely solely on our offense and it doesn’t always go the way we want it to.” *** 1ST ALLIANCE 16 GOLD (SECOND, 7-3) Day 1: l TVC 16 Black 28-26, 18-25, 18-16; d MAVA Adidas 16 Select 25-15, 25-11; d Boiler Jrs 16 Gold 25-18, 25-17 Day 2: d Mintonette Sports m.61 25-16, 25-19; l MKE Sting 16 Gold 23-25, 25-22, 15-12; d KC Power 16-1 18-25, 25-19, 15-13 Day 3: d NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami 25-14, 17-25, 15-13; d Circle City 16 Purple 27-25, 25-12; d OT 16 Jason 26-24, 25-18; l Dynasty 16 Black 25-12, 25-13 After losing to MKE Sting 16 Gold in Day 2 pool play 1st Alliance 16 Gold – playing in its first qualifier of the season at MEQ – faced a moment of truth in its next contest against KC Power 16-1. 1st Alliance was facing elimination with a loss in that one. The way KC Power took the opening set it was looking bleak for the Great Lakes club. However, there was another ending to be written. 1st Alliance came back, winning in three, 18-25, 25-19, 15-13, and kept it going from there. The next day began with qualifying-clinching victories over NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami – the Triple Crown runner up and a team that beat 1st Alliance at that tournament – and Circle City 16 Purple in gold pool play. That effort propelled 1st Alliance into the semis. A bid in hand, 1st Alliance took care of one of the other qualifiers in OT 16 Jason in one semis match before going down to Dynasty 16 Black in the championship. “Overall, we had a really great tournament,” 1st Alliance coach Trish Samolinski said. “We paced ourselves with the tournament and we were just looking to getter. We had a tough final match against a really good Dynasty team. We beat some fantastic teams to get there and they should be proud of where we finished.” 1st Alliance can do some different things with its lineup but one of its mainstays is running Calli Kenny and Ellie White in a 6-2 with both hitting across the front row. Grace Nelson is the go-to on the left and is involved in

Read More »

MEQ: Right Sides Who Stepped Up

With the 2022 version of MEQ in the books, we take a look back at some of the talented players who caught our attention during the three days of action in Indy. These are players we noticed and who were playing well while we were observing them. We put a heavy, heavy focus on the younger groups in 15-17 Open, though a few might be mentioned from 18 Open. Below are the right sides who impressed us. 15 Open Hannah Kenny, Setter/Right Side, 1st Alliance 15 Gold – What a gamer Kenny is! She’s a sparkplug whatever she’s doing on the court and brings an edge to the lineup with her intensity. She has very nice touch and hands as a setter. And though 5-8, she does jump well which allows her to be a successful attacker. 1st Alliance is lucky to have her. Kirra Musgrove, Setter/Right Side, HJV 15 Elite – A 6-1 two-way player for HJV, Musgrove plays with a calmness to her. She’s steady on the set and a lefty with a nice swing on offense. Logan Parks, Setter/Right Side, MAVS KC 15-1 – This 5-11 stud is electric and if you’re passing her court need to take a moment and watch. She’s smooth with her sets and has great location with them. She’s also a strong and springy hitter who can bring it to defenses. Her ceiling is high! 16 OPEN Aspen Maxwell, Right Side, HJV 16 Elite – Maxwell can get up! When she does she can send balls down with authority. Her blocking can also be shutdown at times. She should make someone very happy down the road! Isabelle Poehlein, Right Side, Team Indiana 16.1 – Here’s another player we’re watching for and seeing how she develops. There’s potential there with her 6-2 frame and nice arm swing. Mackenzie Wagner, Right Side, Union 16 UA – We like Wagner. She’s a springy, wirey, whippy lefty who lets loose when the opportunity presents itself. Jillian Huckabey, Right Side, KC Power 16-1 – There’s deception to this 5-11 right side’s game. She doesn’t look like she can hit like she does! But Huckabey can get up and unleash with force. She’s a key part of the KC Power offense, getting set in the back row as well. Abigail Mullen, Right Side, Dynasty 16 Black – As much as defenses need to worry about the outsides coming at them, they cannot forget about Mullen on the right. This freshman playing up is 6-3 with a physical attack. She’s also can be a pain for opposing outsides looking to score with her sound blocking. What an impact she makes! Bailey Higgins, Right Side, OT 16 Jason – Higgins has the ability to be a game changer on the right side. This lefty is equipped with legs that lift her high and an arm that launches shots with ease. 17 OPEN Sydney Schnichels, Right Side, MN Select 17-1 – This 6-4 right side helps make up a tall unit for MN Select. A Minnesota commit, MN Select looks to get Schnichels involved in a variety of ways with her attacking skills, including running her on the X to keep defenses guessing.  Jordyn Dailey, Right Side, CHAVC 17 Black – Committed to Kentucky, Dailey has all the physical gifts in her 6-2 frame. She’s lengthy and leaps high when she’s on the attack. If she puts it all together she could be special at the next level. Lauryn Bowie, Right Side, Mintonette Sports m.71 – Committed to Virginia, Bowie has lots of upside. She’s 6-2 and adds physicality to any lineup on the right. Quinci Thomas, Right Side, Circle City 17 Purple – A Xavier commit, Thomas really helps out Circle City’s offense when she’s on the right. At 6-1 and able to score consistently, she spreads out the attack so Circle City isn’t so left-side heavy. Ceci Gooch, Right Side, Drive Nation 17 Red – Gooch could end up being a steal of a recruit for Michigan. She’s 6-3 and can play in the middle though she is a right side for Drive Nation. With her length she can be tough to slow down when she goes up for the kill. Betsy Goodenow, Right Side, MAVS KC 17-1 – On her way to Yale next year, this 6-0 lefty is going to do damage in the Ivy League! She hits with some serious pop and is a huge part of MAVS’ offense. 18 OPEN Alexa Markley, Right Side, A5 Mizuno 18-Marc – Markley was raw talent when she was younger but the potential was always easy to see. She’s 6-2 and touches 10-3. That mixed with her high-level game it’s no wonder she’s headed to a program like Penn State. Kennedy Martin, Right Side, FC Elite 18 Elite – We’re excited to see what Martin does at the next level. She’s 6-6 and touches 10-8, so she puts up a giant block on the right side. Florida landed an impactful player with her. Frances Torres-Esperanza, Right Side, Metro 18 Travel – This 6-0 right side is playing up in age as she’s a junior. Her blocking was huge for Metro. She’s committed to Colgate. Caroline Jurevicius, Right Side, AVC Clev Rox 18 Red – Jurevicius, with her pure athleticism, has played up an age group for years. She’s a six-rotation right side and at 6-3 can easily do it all at this level. She’s committed to Nebraska.

Read More »

MEQ: Liberos Who Balled Out

With the 2022 version of MEQ in the books, we take a look back at some of the talented players who caught our attention during the three days of action in Indy. These are players we noticed and who were playing well while we were observing them. We put a heavy, heavy focus on the younger groups in 15-17 Open, though a few might be mentioned from 18 Open. Below are the liberos who impressed us. 15 OPEN Callie Krueger, Libero, Austin Skyline 15 Royal – Krueger is a gamer and a lights-out passer. Teams won’t challenge her in serve receive and she keeps her share of rallies going with her hustle. She’s part of the reason Austin Skyline has its Open bid already. Ava Young, Libero, 1st Alliance 15 Gold – It looks like it’s hard to rattle Young. She’s so calm and collected! She’s part of a strong passing group and her ball skills are on point. Hadley Porter, Libero, Dynasty 15 Black – If you think you can get to Porter, it’s wise to think again. She’s a rock in the back row and makes it look effortless at times. MyliBlue Anderson, Libero, Skyline 15 Royal – A steady passer in serve receive, opponents were reluctant to go at her. She was also making plays and keeping rallies alive. 16 OPEN Alice Volpe, Libero, HJV 16 Elite – It’s wise to keep the ball away from Volpe. She’ll make the play if it’s there with steady consistency. Zoe Cooper, Libero, Union 16 UA – Union produces some of the best ball control and defensive teams in the nation year in and year out. On this squad it’s Cooper carrying the tradition of strong liberos. She’s rarely out of position and just as rarely misses her mark. Elizabeth Tabeling, Libero, NKYVC 16 Tsunami – Tabeling fits the mold of some of the typical liberos NKYVC has cranked out. She covers the court well. She passes dimes. Just steady with what she does. Mya Bolton, Libero, KC Power 16-1 – Bolton is unflappable. She’s talkative on the court and always communicating. Her passing is consistent. And she can pass half the court in serve receive. Ryan McAleer, Libero, Dynasty 16 Black – There’s really not a weakness on Dynasty, with McAleer aptly handling the libero duties. She has range and great ball skills. Samantha Falk, Libero, 1st Alliance 16 Gold – What we saw of Falk she looked her best in the semis against KC Power. She was getting everything up and covering the touch blocks very well. Alleigh Dutton, Libero, Circle City 16 Purple – We like the range Dutton plays with. She can make up ground with her quickness and is consistent with her passing. 17 OPEN Sydney Breissinger, Libero, Elevation 17 Goller – Breissinger – committed to Creighton – owns the back row for Elevation. She passes and defends with ease! Laney Choboy, Libero, Academy 17 Diamond – A total top-notch libero. Choboy – who is committed to Minnesota – brings a next-level athleticism to the position. She absolutely flies around the court and is always willing to sacrifice her body to extend rallies. She’s an absolute joy to watch! Zoe Winford, Libero, TAV 17 Black – Winford switched off at libero throughout the weekend but arguably turned in her best performance in the final against TAV. She was a wall in the back row, picking off some huge swings from Circle City’s powerful outsides. McKenna Gildon, Libero, TAV 17 Black – Gildon took turns between libero and DS throughout the weekend. She definitely had her moments and was playing particularly well on Day 2 when we saw her. Alayna Pearson, Libero, KC Power 17-1 – This Texas AM recruit can get around the court in a hurry. She makes up ground quick and covers well. She was one of the more exciting liberos to watch! 18 OPEN Emma Farrell, libero, A5 Mizuno 18-Marc: Farrell has been one of the top liberos in her class since her younger days in club. She’s committed to Wake Forest where she’s sure to continue to star. Saige Damrow, libero, FC Elite 18 Elite – Long one of the top liberos in the Class of 2023, Damrow is on her way to defending national champion Wisconsin. Nothing gets by this junior on her watch. Samiha Foster, Libero, Metro 18 Travel – This smooth libero always seems to get her platform on the ball. She’s headed to West Virginia.

Read More »

MEQ: Impressive Outsides (Part 2)

With the 2022 version of MEQ in the books, we take a look back at some of the talented players who caught our attention during the three days of action in Indy. These are players we noticed and who were playing well while we were observing them. We put a heavy, heavy focus on the younger groups in 15-17 Open, though a few are mentioned from 18 Open. Below is Part 2 of the outside hitters who impressed us. 15 Open Lauren Lopez, Outside, Dynasty 15 Black – It can be tough for blockers to time Lopez. She gets up quickly and can generate pace on her attacks. When Dynasty needs a point it’ll be looking for Lopez. Grace Kreutz, Outside, Adversity 15 Purple – A solid all-around outside. She passes sound. She can score. And she serves bullets at times too. Adversity has a good one in her. Emma Koceja, Outside, MKE Sting 15 Gold – Sting is definitely looking to get this 6-0 outside the ball. She’s springy off the floor and isn’t afraid to let it go. She’d make a few highlight reels! Addison Tindall, Outside, Team Pineapple 15 Black – At 6-2 you can’t miss Tindall on the outside. She moves well. Has a big arm. And hits up high. She has future star written all over her! Logan Bell, Outside, Circle City 15 Purple – At 5-11, Bell can’t necessarily go over the top of blockers but she’s a smart hitter with a lively arm. Isabella Ocampo, Outside, Skyline 15 Royal – Ocampo is a steady six-rotation outside for Skyline. She covers well in the back row and at a 5-10 has a knack for scoring with heady shots. 16 Open Carlie Cisneros, Outside, Dynasty 16 Black – Cisneros does everything above average. At 6-0, she can get on top of the ball. She’s a smart hitter who seemingly scores every time she swings. She passes well. We could go on but we are trying to keep it short! Skyler Pierce, Outside, Dynasty 16 Black – Just about everyone already knows about Pierce. She’s a 6-2 future star who punishes defenses in many ways, especially when the block is late to set up and she crushes it straight down. You’ll be hearing a lot about her for years to come! Taylor Bedinghaus, Outside, OT 16 Jason – A very sound, well-rounded outside is Bedinghaus. She hits out of the back row and is even strong on the attack when she’s up front. Hannah Hankerson, Outside, OT 16 Jason – Hankerson is a bit undersized but that doesn’t her slow her one bit. She’s explosive when she elevates. She’s fearless with a hard, aggressive swing challenging blockers. Alaleh Tolliver, Outside, Academy 16 Yeti – Tolliver is the go-to and the one Academy relies on for a point when it needs one. At 5-11, she has a nice jump and can make plays out of the back row as well. Ava Utterback, Outside, Circle City 16 Purple – When Utterback has it going on she’s as tough to stop as anybody. She’s 6-0 and touches 10-0 and unleashes some big, aggressive swings. It makes her fun to watch! Alec Rothe, Outside, EliteVBTC 16 Black – There’s no telling how far Rothe could go. She has potential written all over her. She seems even longer than her height of 6-2 and carries a smooth arm. We’ll definitely be following along! Payton Petersen, Outside, Six Pack 16 – One thing we noticed about this 6-0 outside beyond her strong attack was Petersen was getting lots of touches on balls at the net blocking. 17 Open Ava Smith, Outside, Circle City 17 Purple – Circle City has tons of firepower on the left with Chloe Chicoine and Smith. At 6-1 and touching 10-1, Smith can tee off and score with authority. She remains uncommitted but we are eagerly awaiting where she eventually lands! Kyndal Stowers, Outside, TAV 17 Black – Stowers is another one of those players we can go on and on about. The 5-11 outside is committed to Baylor. She’s smooth and effortless and can punish balls to the floor. It’s no wonder why she’s one of the top recruits in the class! Emily Simmons, Outside, TAV 17 Black – This 5-10 outside was the unsung hero during TAV’s victory over Circle City in the 17 Open final. She took some key swings on the left and had it working down the line to help carry TAV to victory. Harper Murray, Outside, Legacy 17-1 Adidas – This 6-1 outside deserves paragraphs written about her and her play. In hopes of keeping it brief she’s just a flat-out stud who can take over matches at will. She’ll fit it nicely at Nebraska! Nina Horning, Outside, Legacy 17-1 Adidas – This 6-4 outside is committed to Cincinnati and brings much balance to the Legacy outside. She’s primarily a three-rotation player and with her size she can help carry the offense when she’s in the front. 18 Open Sydney Jackwin, Outside, OT 18 Chad – Another undersized player for OT in the world of 18s yet this LA tech commit is a gamer. We love her scrappiness and competitiveness she brings to the lineup. Laila Ivey, Outside, Metro 18 Travel – You can’t help but notice Ivey on the outside. This Maryland commit is a serious flyer who gets up with the best of them.

Read More »

MEQ: Impressive Outsides (Part 1)

With the 2022 version of MEQ in the books, we take a look back at some of the talented players who caught our attention during the three days of action in Indy. These are players we noticed and who were playing well while we were observing them. We put a heavy, heavy focus on the younger groups in 15-17 Open, though a few are mentioned from 18 Open. Below is Part 1 of the outside hitters who impressed us. 15 OPEN Gabriella DiVita, Outside, Legacy 15-1 Adidas – It’s hard to believe DiVita is an eighth-grader! This 6-0 outside already possesses a whippy arm and is aggressive on the attack with it. Watch out for her making her way through the ranks! Abby Vander Wal, Outside, 1st Alliance 15 Gold – This 6-3 outside is on everyone’s radar. The sky is the limit with her seemingly endless frame and ability to put it to good work with a strong attack that blockers have trouble slowing down. Definitely a rising star! Mariah Gaines, Outside, OPVC 15 Wagner – OPVC didn’t break pool but did push OT 15 Randy to three games with Gaines doing her thing. She can explode off the ground with her springy legs, brings a strong attack and can hit out of the back. Glad we didn’t miss her! Zoe Baliva, Outside, HPSTL 15 Royal – Part of a strong outside combo for HPSTL, Baliva looks like an up and comer. Her jump on her attack looks effortless, her swing is solid and she can score consistently. Hannah Leftridge, Outside, HPSTL 15 Royal – A bit undersized at 5-9, Leftridge is a scrappy gamer who is just a solid player in lots of areas. She can hit front and back row and has sound ball control skills. Every team could use a player like her. Kennedi Rogers, Outside, HJV 15 Elite – Rogers, who is 5-10, plays with tons of energy and effort. She can get up and blast off on balls. She’s also a scrapper on defense who can keep rallies alive with her defense. Pay attention to her as she continues her career! Taylor Cripe, Outside, Boilers Jrs 15 Gold – A fiery outside, Cripe is a gamer. She’s an aggressive attacker who isn’t afraid to let loose and go for it. She’s the go-to outside and doesn’t back down. 16 OPEN Cayla Cogan, Outside, Legacy 16-1 Adidas – Listed at 5-9, Cogan is the smallest offensive player listed on Legacy’s roster but don’t let that size fool you. She gets off the ground and up in the air with ease! She fits in nicely in the Legacy attack. Audrey Geer, Outside, Legacy 16-1 Adidas – Another outside with a nice bounce to her step. Geer gets up and at it with her lively arm. Defenses better be on their toes! Grace Nelson, Outside, 1st Alliance 16 Gold – Looking at Nelson with her slender frame and thinking she’s not a threat is a big mistake. This girl has an explosive attack! She gets up and bangs it with her lively arm and aggressive swing. She’s a fun one to watch! Melia Johnson, Outside, MKE Sting 16 Gold – Sting has some size on the roster, including this 6-2 outside. Johnson has a powerful arm and can go boom! Morgan Gaerte, Outside, Team Pineapple 16 Black – We can’t wait to see Gaerte at the next level. At 6-5, she’s a coach’s dream. She carries a smooth swing and is only going to get better and better. Make sure she’s on your radar! Alea Goolsby, Outside, KC Power 16-1 – It’s hard to believe Goolsby is just a freshman! Talk about power, she’s an absolute slugger with a hammer for an arm. It’s going to be fun to see where she’s at four years from now! Rachel Van Gorp, Outside, KC Power 16-1 – A state qualifier in long jump you can see it in Van Gorp’s game. At 5-9 she’s not as tall as other outsides. But she can get off the floor and has a deceptive cannon for an arm. Don’t underestimate her! 17 OPEN Makya Clayton, Outside, PVA 17 Elite – We really appreciate Clayton’s game. She’s listed at 5-6 but has as much heart as anyone! A six-rotation outside, she passes well out of serve receive. She also just explodes on the attack when called for. She’s a smart attacker, who not only can let it rip but can swipe balls of the block and frustrate blockers who think they have the advantage. Olivia Swenson, Outside, MN Select 17-1 – One of three sophomores playing up for MN Select, this 6-3 outside is going to be a score for some future collegiate program! Cassidy Hartman, Outside, Six Pack 17 – It looked like to us that Hartman was a glue piece for Six Pack. She’s a 6-0 hustler with all-around game. Ella Durham, Outside, Mintonette Sports m.71 – Durham is listed as uncommitted but is going to eventually make some program happy to have landed her. At 6-3, she has a powerful arm and is only improving in her first year with Mintonette. Chloe Chicoine, Outside, Circle City 17 Purple – One could go on and on about this Purdue commit. There isn’t anything she can’t do at a high level. She ridiculously explosive and insanely quick. There’s only a handful to watch who are as entertaining as she is! 18 OPEN Cheridyn Leverette, Outside, A5 Mizuno 18-Marc – Originally a member of A5 South, Leverette joined A5’s main club her 16s season and made an immediate impact. She’s a consistent scorer with her 6-2 frame and touching 10-3. She’s headed to the West Coast to play for UCLA. Ella Demetrician, Outside, FC Elite 18 Elite – It’s hard to believe Demetrician is only a sophomore! This Class of 2024 recruit is 6-2 and is almost touching 10-0. She can bring the heat already and is one to watch out for!

Read More »