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USAV 14-15s: Day 4 Show Stoppers

One of the standout aspects that brought immense enjoyment during the last few days of the USAV Girls National Championships for ages 14-15 was the level of competition. The 14 and 15 Open divisions featured loaded fields, but the same could be said for the 14-15 National-Patriot divisions and numerous other teams in attendance. It was truly impressive to witness the incredible talent and skill exhibited by so many young girls who were absolutely dominating the court. Their passion and determination to excel in the sport of volleyball was inspiring and it was a testament to the bright future of the game. Among the teams that caught my attention every time I walked by was Mauloa 15 Green. They stood out with their scrappy and powerful style of play. Their determination and tenacity on the court demanded attention, making them a captivating team to watch. One match that I truly enjoyed watching was the championship match between 1st Alliance 15 Gold and MKE Sting 15 Gold in the 15 National Division. It was awesome to witness the fierce competition on both sides, as the pins swung with fiery intensity. The liberos’ relentless defense and the relentless offensive attacks from both teams added to the excitement. With both teams employing a 5-1 system and their setters playing all the way around, the match offered a unique dynamic that showcased the versatility and skill of the players. The presence of dominant middle blockers creating impactful plays added an extra layer of excitement to the game.  Throughout the day, there were a few players who truly stood out and left a lasting impression. One such player was Olivia Henry, an exceptional outside hitter from ASEVC 15 Premier. Her ability to effortlessly hit over the block showcased her incredible power and skill. Another athlete who caught my attention was Marlee Sivak from MKE Sting 15 Gold. Her fierce swings on the outside were relentless. Two more remarkable athletes that come to mind from the 14s are Corina Barrera, a six-rotation outside hitter from STVA 14 Mizuno, and Kristen Sheehy, a formidable middle blocker from AZ REV 14 Premier. Barrera’s versatility and skills as an outside hitter were truly impressive, as she consistently showcased her ability to contribute in all areas of the game. On the other hand, Sheehy’s imposing presence at the net with her massive blocks made her a force to be reckoned with.  DAY 4 SHOW STOPPERS  Lundin Leitch S Surfside 14 Loriann: One word, SPITFIRE. Everytime I watched this squad Leitch was running down balls off the court. She was running a 5-1 and was undersized. That didn’t stop her.  Lillie Duitsman OH Club One AZ 14Platinum: Duitsman is a six-rotation outside who was providing great offense but it was her defense that caught my attention.  Hope Erdman MB Tejas 14 Black Marco: Erdman was taking big swings in the middle and on the right. She brought a ton of fire to her squad.  Corina Barrera OH STVA 14 Mizuno: Barrera, like I mentioned above, was doing it all well. She has a no-fear attitude on the court.  Saniya Reynolds MB HJV 14 ELITE: Reynolds showed so much upside and is someone to keep tabs on as she continues to develop. She was making herself known by getting her hands on lots of balls. Korynn Mayo OH UNITED 14’s Evren: Mayo plays with lots of energy and a high spirit. She has a good arm and is fearless, as she keeps coming at defenses time and time again. Aleigha Zollicoffee MB KC Power 14 Black: While Zollicoffee might not be as tall as some middles, she brings a level of physicality to the court that is impressive. Alexa Espin MB/RS Miami Hype 14N Nekane: Espin is quick off the ground with a quick arm swing that beats defenses on the reg.  Kristen Sheehy MB AZ REV 14 Premier: Sheehy is both a offensive and defensive threat on the court. She can pound balls in the middle.  Lara Matta OH Tampa North 15 Black: Matta is a wirey outside with a nice bounce and swing. She’s a six-rotation threat.  Olivia Henry OH ASEVC 15 Premier: Henry was literally hitting over blocks. And what is truly scary is she is playing up a division.  Piper Batie OH Ozark Juniors 15 Elite: Batie has a big arm and hits with a heavy hand. She smacked a few balls down with authority.  Kaia Ciszewski OH Tstreet 15-Curtis: Ciszewski is a six-rotation outside with strong ball control skills. She sees the court well and has a variety of shots to throw at defenses.  Ashlyn Seay OH Drive Nation 15-Red: Seay was letting loose on balls for impressive kills. She was also steady in serve receive. Macy McAmis L Jupiter Elite 15E: McAmis is a gritty libero who owns the back row. She’s a sound passer and scrappy on defense.  Frankie Jones MB Sunshine 15 Westside: Jones is an athletic middle who moves well. She has a quick leap and nice arm that makes her a scoring threat on in-system passes.  Chloe Garcia S/RS 305 15 Alan: Garcia is an up-and-coming prospect and someone to keep tabs on. She’s an athletic setter who gets to the ball and sets with consistency and accuracy. She also a strong attacker with a solid arm. Kiana Johnson L OJVA 15-1 Gold: Johnson helps hold down serve receive with her consistent passing. She also does well making tough defensive plays. Sadie Snyder OH AZ REV 15 Premier: A go-to on the left, Synder carries a large offensive load. She has a good arm and a strong knack for scoring to help pace the offense. Kelly Valdez L Mauloa 15’s Green Mauloa: Valdez literally was “nails” for passing. She is also quick on her feet and scrappy to boot.  Ava McBride OH/RS Actyve 15-Black JD: McBride is a dynamic attacker. She scores well from the pins. And her line shot is quite impressive.  Simone Searles OH A5 15 Bob: Searles brings a bit of physicality to the lineup. She’s a strong hitter who can unleash big kills at times. Mia Crowley OH/RS TAV Houston 15 Adidas:

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USAV 14-15s: Day 3 Show Stoppers

Entering the third day of the USAV Girls Junior National Championships, one is immediately immersed in an atmosphere of fierce competition and electric energy. Teams are fighting relentlessly for a spot in the coveted gold bracket which sets up an electric environment. Friday, across all divisions, the level of intensity knew no bounds. From the powerful hitters to the defenders displaying unwavering tenacity, the relentless display of skill and passion made every match thrilling to watch.  In a crossover matchup, WPVC 14 Armour Black faced off against 1United 14N Bill. With both teams leaving it all on the court, the battle was an intense back-and-forth affair. Ultimately, WPVC emerged victorious after a hard-fought three-set match 23-25, 25-17, 15-5. Isabel Incinelli was a major factor in her team’s hard fought win.  In a crossover match between Milwaulkee Sting 15 Gold and Jupiter Elite 15E, libero Cassidy Bruns of Milwaulkee Sting owned the back court with her sensational performance. Her defensive prowess and energy were a joy to watch.  As the day unfolded, surprising upsets occurred, reminding us of the unpredictable nature of the game. Who’s ready for Day 4?!  DAY 3 SHOW STOPPERS Jaiden Harris OH Areté 14 Navy Telos: Harris was a lot of fun to watch. She was swinging everywhere with zero fear and coming up big.  Camryn Corso OH 1United 14N Bill: Corso, a six-rotation outside hitter, was swinging well everywhere on the court.  Isabel Incinelli MB WPVC 14 Armour Black: Incinelli is a huge factor on the court. She is a wall defensively at the net while offensively can hammer in the middle.  Lucy Ripley MB FC Elite 14 Navy: This is my first time seeing Ripley play and I was impressed with her court presence in the middle. She is a big swinger for her squad. Kylee Mayes L NORCO Black 14-1: Mayes is a scrappy libero who can read the ball incredibly well. She is also fast with no fear.  Kaelyn Bjorklund S/RS  Northern Lights 14-1: She can set on the move as well and does a nice job of connecting with all her hitters. She also is an offensive weapon in the front row.  Taylor Harrington MB Paramount VBC 14’s: Harrington is an imposing presence at the net and will make teams pay if the pass or set is too tight as she touches everything.  Allyn Hilt OH Surfside 14 Loriann: Hilt was bringing the fire and heat on the outside when I was watching.  Camille Csernik OH TX LEGACY 14 ELITE: Csernik was getting after it with her attack. She has a great jump with a fluid swing.  Makenna Sanders OH Premier Nebraska 14 Black: Sanders has a cannon for an arm. She is fluid and a huge threat on the outside.  Sarah Hickman RS HJV 15 ELITE: Hickman is a big weapon across the front row. She provides a punch with her scoring and blocking. Sydney Clark OH Areté 15 Navy Telos: Clark, an undersized outside hitter, is powerful and fearless. It’s a great combination, as she gets up well too and lets it rip whether front or back row. Emerson Boyd S/RS Areté 15 Navy Telos: Boyd showed what she can bring to a lineup with her setting and hitting abilities. She was delivering with consistent location when setting. Cassidy Bruns  L MKE Sting 15 Gold Sting: Bruns was playing lights out defense. She was literally everywhere on the court.   Ryea Jackson MB Drive Nation 15-Red: Jackson finds ways to score and also comes up with massive blocks.  Jordan Valentine OH 1United 15N Dylan: Valentine is a firecracker on the court. She also brings the heat and is aggressive with her attacks. Ellah Derrer MB Iowa Select 15 Mizuno: Derrer was a wall defensively for her squad. She was touching lots of swings and giving her defenders chances to make plays behind her.  Sophia Towle OH COAST 15-1:  Towle is a good hitter with a good arm and can score consistently. Emerson Jones MB MADFROG 15’S N BLACK: Jones can put up a sound block and give attackers trouble with it. She was also packing a punch offensively.  Makenna Hertless MB STVA 15 Mizuno: Hertless is quick and moves very well. She carries a good arm and proved to be a consistent, reliable scorer when called upon. Jenna Thedford  L HOU STELLAR 15 ELITE: Thedford is a defensive leader. She was getting her hands on a lot of balls and helping keep rallies alive.  Mollie VanDeusen S JJVA 15 Teal: VanDeusen, setting a 5-1, was on point and steady with her play. She was running the offense very well. Britni Silver OH ECJVC 15 National: Silver is one to keep an eye on as she continues to develop. She was taking aggressive swings and showcasing a quick arm that was lighting defenses up. Camille Huff MB LAV 15 National Black: Huff makes an impact on both sides with her scoring and blocking. LK LaMonica S A5 15-2 Victor: LaMonica did well in her roles as the back row setter. She was locating with consistency and making defensive plays as well. She’s a vocal leader too. Lilly Boatner RS TAV 15 Blue: Boatner was taking aggressive swings, putting the heat on her swings and scoring in clutch moments.  Sofia Guerrero-Wilson MB A5 15-Bob: Guerrero-Wilson was giving defenses something to think about with her ability to run the slide effectively. She also has a high reach when attacking in the middle.  Olivia Branum S OP2 15-1: Branum is a fluid, smooth setter who can run tempo on any set.  Chalei Reid OH Mauloa 15’s Green: Reid is an athletic outside who hits a heavy and aggressive ball consistently.

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USAV 15 Open: Day 4 All Red Hat Team

The volleyball world received the rematch between vballrecruiter.com’s top two teams in the country as No. 1 Skyline 15 Royal swept past No. 2 Mintonette Sports m.51 to capture the USAV 15 Open gold medal Saturday in Chicago. It was less than weeks ago when the two sides squared off in Orlando, with Mintonette winning there and claiming the AAU 15 Open championship. As for the final day of 15 Open competition in Chicago, it was lights-out and easily the best volleyball we witnessed all season. Picking the Day 4 All Red Hat Team was no easy task as we present our 10 players below. The goal is to highlight a daily team consisting of two players from each position – outside, middle, right side, setter and libero who – were our absolute favorite players of the day. Favorite doesn’t mean only a 5-star recruit or a familiar name. These are players who stood out to us for a variety of reasons, from amazing play to great energy or attitude or making key hustle plays. These are daily all-stars who really stood out the most to us for one reason or another. DAY 4 ALL RED HAT TEAM Halle Thompson OH Hou Skyline 15 Royal: If this tournament were a video game, Thompson would be the cheat code! The 6-2 high-flying outside established herself as the class of the division. About the only thing she can’t do on the attack is score with a bicycle kick. Other than that, the only way to stop her is to hope she misses her swing. She’s so long and athletic and hits so high and fast that she overwhelms defenses. Layla Hoying OH Mintonette Sports m.51: Hoying’s all-around game was on full display as Mintonette finished with the silver medal. She’s such a strong player physically and is a solid passer and defender out of the back row. And though she’s a bit undersized compared to other outsides in the division, she can get up and send balls straight down without a problem. Keoni Williams MB Skyline 15 Royal: The 6-4 Williams takes over the net like few can. She’s so long and takes up a lot of space with her reach. Even when she’s not touching or blocking balls, she’s still impacting hitters’ swings in order to avoid her. Offensively, she’s a force who can hammer balls over the block at tough-to-defend angles. LeVariya Pinder MB Skyline 15 Royal: Pinder plays outside in high school and you can see in the way she attacks out of the middle. At 6-0, she’s not short but not necessarily tall compared to Williams. Still, Pinder is quick and gets up in a hurry. It allows her to be impactful at the net scoring and blocking. Taylor Clarke RS Skyline 15 Royal: Clarke – part of the Class of 2025 – is a game-changing right side with the way she can score and open up the attack. The dynamic of Skyline’s offense complete changes when she checks in, opening the attack and providing another high-flying option who can go over or around blocks with ease. Willow Weninger RS Pohaku 15-1: We love what Weninger brings to the lineup. She’s a fiery right side who also changes the look of the attack when she’s front row. She’s lanky with a lively arm and is a featured part of the attack who defenses must respect and be ready for. Madison Victoriano S Skyline 15 Royal: All Victoriano does is win! Saturday marked her fourth Open medal as Skyline lifted the championship trophy. She’s a quick setter who moves very well and does a nice job getting her feet to the ball and delivering. She has a soft touch and locates well. Eva Long S Legacy 15-1 Adidas: We love watching Long compete because she’s such a gamer. You can see the intensity she plays with but she also does well playing under control. She does well directing the attack and mixing up her sets and getting all her hitters involved. Emma Cugino L Mintonette Sports m.51: Few defend and patrol the back row like Cugino. She’s a total stud and a defensive stalwart. She’s a high-level passer and defender. She also has a great hands and does very well setting off balls to help keep Mintonette in system. Henlee Moszkowicz L Hou Skyline 15 Royal: Moszkowicz was arguably our favorite player from Day 4 and that’s saying something. Hou Skyline is known for its relentless attack but she was bringing a defensive edge and tenacity to the court. She was making tons of plays keeping rallies alive and standing in against big-swinging hitters.

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USAV 14 Open: Day 4 All Red Hat Team

In the end, no one could prevent TAV 14 Black from taking its place on the top step of the podium as the club captured the 14 Open USAV national championship Saturday in Chicago. With the gold bracket playing out on the final day of competition, the intensity level was exactly as you imagined it would be. Off the charts. It produced both amazing team and individual play, which leads us to presenting our Day 4 All Red Hat Team. The goal is to highlight a daily team consisting of two players from each position – outside, middle, right side, setter and libero who – were our absolute favorite players of the day. Favorite doesn’t mean only a 5-star recruit or a familiar name. These are players who stood out to us for a variety of reasons, from amazing play to great energy or attitude or making key hustle plays. These are daily all-stars who really stood out the most to us for one reason or another. DAY 4 ALL RED HAT TEAM Ella Olson OH Tstreet 14 Carson: Olson was easily in the top tier of players in both performance and fun factor. She’s a pure volleyball player who does everything at a high level. She flies around the court in the back row defending and laying out for balls. She’s a sound passer out of serve receive. As she’s a tough cover on the attack with her beach smarts and ability to mix in a wide variety of shots to frustrate defenses with. Ava Burgess OH Club V 14 Ren Silver: Club V deserves immense credit for being the only team outside our Top 10 to reach the gold bracket. Burgess is not only a blossoming talent who has next-level written all over her, she’s also a weapon currently and was a big part of the team’s success. She’s a lanky outside with a great arm and ability to blast balls from sideline to sideline. We love the emotion and passion she plays with (check out the photo above). That’s someone you want on your team when you have to win a match. Kendall Omoruyi MB Arizona Storm 14 Thunder: Spectators came for the volleyball and received a free blocking clinic in the process. To say the 6-4 Omoruyi owns the net is to say water is wet. She gets up and presses her arms over like few can and she’s a total game-changer as a result. She’s a point scorer with her blocking, as well as with her big arm. She gets up well over the block and can pound balls down at ridiculous angles. Megan Hodges MB Tstreet 14 Carson: Hodges – part of the Class of 2028 – showed plenty of what is to come in the future. She’s another presence in the middle with her size and she too has the ability to impact both sides of the net with her blocking and attacking. She was making plays at the net in Tstreet’s three-set setback to Arizona Storm in the quarterfinals. She also plays with a lot of energy and passion and it’s fun to see. Simrin Adams RS Mizuno Long Beach 14 Rockstar: Adams isn’t the biggest or hardest-hitting right side but she is effective in her role and she plays with great on-court demeanor and hustle. She’s one of the few right sides who passes out of serve receive too, adding value there. She’s also a smart hitter who can send balls down the line with pace or throw in a cagey off speed shot to catch the defenses on its heels. Brynn Stephens S/RS TAV 14 Black: Stephens brings so much to the floor with her setting and hitting. She’s also a fierce competitor. It doesn’t hurt that she’s also long and is the total package. She’s a sharp setter who can dish to any spot with consistent accuracy, whether in front or behind her. As an attacker, watch out. She can extend way up and rip balls down as well as anyone in the division. Sophee Peterson S/RS TAV 14 Black: The word that comes to mind with Peterson is ease. We wrote about her earlier in the tournament with her setting, hitting and defending. And she does it all while making it look easy. She’s a smooth setter with a soft touch and she too can deliver balls in front or behind her with great accuracy. She plays great defense and when it comes to hitting she doesn’t have the length of Stephens but she’s just effective in scoring points. Zamari Christensen S Club V 14 Ren Silver: Christensen is a high-octane setter who zips around the court. She too played a big role in Club V’s run. She does well getting to the ball and has a clean, consistent release. She does well connecting with her hitters. Ansley Shafer L TAV 14 Black: What we love about Shafer is she doesn’t blink. She’s not afraid to stand in against the biggest of hitters in order to make a play and keep the rally alive. She’s also quick and makes up ground in a hurry when covering. Nafanua Alofipo L Club V 14 Ren Silver: Alofipo was among the best liberos in the division and has no issues taking care of the defensive duties. She too is a quick libero who flies around the court making plays. She’s not one to challenge in serve receive as she’s an on-point passer.

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USAV 16 Open: Preview And Predictions (FREE)

Helping to wrap up the USAV Girls Junior National Championships in Chicago is the 16 Open division, which runs July 3-6. The top teams have taken turns beating each other up all season and it’s going to create a frenzied finish to the calendar. Below, we take a look at what to watch for and reveal our predicted winner. 16 OPEN Number of Teams: 36 vballrecruiter.com National Rankings:   5-Star Athletes to Know:   Outlook: The top six seeds virtually mirror our Top 50 National Rankings. 1st Alliance is tops in both categories, with a slight difference with the next two. We have Drive Nation 16 Red at No. 2 in the country, followed by No. 3 Surfside 16 PV Legends. As for the seedings, those two are switched. Hou Skyline 16 Royal, HJV 16 Elite and Arizona Storm 16 Thunder follow at Nos. 4, 5 and 6 respectively in both our rankings and seedings. The first big deviation comes next with ID Crush 16 Bower at No. 7. We have ID Crush at No. 23 in the rankings. It’s true ID Crush finished first at three qualifiers in PNQ, Salt Lake City and Far Western but those were not the toughest qualifiers. ID Crush did participate in the Red Rock Rave, where it made the gold pools but finished tied for ninth. AAU 16 Open champ Adidas KiVA 16 Red checks in as the No. 12 overall seed. The two at-large recipients in Legacy 16-1 Adidas and Mich Elite 16 Mizuno received respectable seeds at No. 13 and 16 respectively. MKE Sting 16 Gold, which is No. 12 in our Top 50 National Rankings, received a lower seed than expected at No. 22. Prediction: Let’s first look at which teams are going to break pool, then we’ll pick the quarterfinalists and eventual winner. ROUND 1 Pool 1 1st Alliance 4-1 OT 16 JP 4-1 Legacy 3-2 Wave 2-3 Madfrog 2-3 Vision 0-5 Pool 2 Surfside 5-0 KiVA 4-1 Tribe 3-2 Austin Skyline 2-3 MAVS 1-4 Triangle 0-5 Pool 3 Drive Nation 5-0 Circle City 4-1 MKE Sting 3-2 GP 2-3 Alamo 1-4 Coast 0-5 Pool 4 Nebraska One 5-0 Hou Skyline 4-1 Mich Elite 3-2 AVC Cle 2-3 OT 16 Roberto 1-4 Vegas Aces 0-5 Pool 5 A5 4-1 TAV 4-1 HJV 3-2 HPSTL 3-2 NorCal 1-4 Oaks 0-5 Pool 6 Arizona Storm 5-0 Northern Lights 4-1 Vaqueras 3-2 ID Crush 2-3 Premier Nebraska 1-4 Long Beach 0-5 *** Quarterfinalists 1st Alliance Drive Nation Hou Skyline Arizona Storm A5 Circle City HPSTL Austin Skyline Final 1st Alliance d Arizona Storm Bronzes Cirlce City; Drive Nation

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USAV 14 Open: Gold Medal Rundown

If a season of dominance was to turn into four days of vulnerability, TAV never let on as its time in Chicago was less a tournament and more of a coronation. There was never doubt surrounding TAV’s place in the 14 Open division, which it cemented with a sweep of national No. 2 Arizona Storm 14 Thunder, 25-19, 25-16, in Saturday’s championship match. The North Texas Region club dropped just two matches entering the USAV Girls Junior National Championships in Chicago. One came to Drive Nation 14 Red in regional play. The other was to Tstreet 14 Carson in the final of the Salt Lake City Showdown qualifier in April. Other than that, TAV has been untouchable and was a heavy favorite to claim the gold medal. Yet, we’ve seen similar scenarios before when the fairytale ending disappears in a blink of an upset and leaves teams heartbroken and in despair. And that’s with a full roster available, a luxury TAV was not afforded as it chased the championship trophy in Chicago. Weeks ago TAV lost one half of its starting middle duo when Nyla Livings broke her hand and would not be able to participate. Even when TAV was most vulnerable this season it did not matter. The opening match provided the perfect opportunity for an upset and though Forza1 14 One was up for the challenge, TAV still found a way in winning in three, 21-25, 25-14, 15-11. TAV dropped just one more set the rest of the way, with it coming in a three-game victory over A5 14 Helen, 23-25, 25-16, 15-10, in the final outing of the first round of pool play. What TAV did during elimination matches was frightening, beginning with its dominant sweep of Rage 14 Garren, 25-10, 25-8, in challenge play. If the gold bracket was supposed to offer stiffer competition, it certainly didn’t play out that way on Day 4. Up first was Mizuno Long Beach 14 Rockstar – ranked No. 4 in our Top 50. It proved to be a warm-up of sorts, as TAV cruised, 25-11, 25-14. Next up was Skyline 14 Royal – which checked in at No. 6 in our Top 50. It was over just as quickly, with TAV sweeping, 25-14, 25-21. The championship match was surely meant to be different. There TAV was to face Arizona Storm in a semifinal rematch from Triple Crown back in February. TAV took that meeting in three, 25-21, 17-25, 15-9, yet Saturday’s clash never materialized in the same manner. Arizona Storm reached the final in part because of its dramatic victory over No. 3 Tstreet 14 Carson in the quarterfinals. With Tstreet falling to at-large recipient Tejas 14 Black in the first round of pool play and taking second place, the two sides met a round earlier than the original seedings would have dictated. Tstreet came out on fire and Storm had no answers. But the break in action between sets offered time for Storm to regroup, which it did before squeaking out the victory in three, 15-25, 25-23, 15-12. With Arizona Storm taking it to Madfrog 14 Green, 25-10, 25-13, in the semis, the clash between the top two teams in the country was all set but there was no stopping TAV. Madfrog was also involved in a thrilling quarterfinal with upstart Club V 14 Ren Silver. Club V was the only quarterfinalist not ranked in the Top 10 of our national rankings. Club V checked in at No. 29 and was within points of medaling. However, Madfrog held firm and prevailed in three, 17-25, 25-18, 15-13, to clinch its spot on the podium with a bronze medal. Skyline earned its bronze by sweeping past No. 10 Drive Nation 14 Red, 25-15, 25-19, in its quarterfinal encounter. It was Drive Nation’s only setback of the tournament.

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USAV 15 Open: Gold Medal Rundown

A trilogy anyone? If there’s any possible way imaginable to get a third national championship showdown between the top two teams in the country we have to go all in toward making it happen! For the second time in less than two weeks top-ranked Skyline 15 Royal and No. 2 Mintonette Sports m.51 stared across the net at each other with a gold medal in the balance. Mintonette outlasted Skyline 11 days ago in Orlando and with the three-set victory captured the AAU 15 Open championship. Arriving in Chicago, Mintonette was seeking a double-double of sorts. As last year’s 14 Open champions, Mintonette was looking to go back-to-back in winning USAV national championships, plus adding to the its national championship toll in 2023 by claiming another gold medal and establishing itself as the undisputed best squad in the nation. That we as fans were lucky and fortunate enough to see the two best teams in the country work their way through four days of competition to earn a championship rematch was remarkable in itself. Other than the location, not much changed in terms of the matchup between the two sides. Mintonette desperately needed to win the serve and pass battle as it did in Orlando. But Skyline played much cleaner volleyball, which allowed Skyline to run its offense more effectively and put more pressure on Mintonette. It led to a tight sweep, 26-24, 25-21, as Skyline evened the national championship series. It’s a shame we won’t get a third clash. And though Mintonette did win the AAU championship, given the depth and strength of field in Chicago, we fully expect Skyline to end the season as the No. 1 team in our Top 50 National Rankings. Joining Skyline and Mintonette on the podium were bronze medalists Hou Skyline 15 Royal and Arizona Storm 15 Thunder. Hou Skyline entered the four-day event ranked No. 4 in our Top 50 and performed accordingly. Hou Skyline gave Skyline a major fight in the semifinals before Skyline narrowly pulled out the sweep, 26-24, 25-23. Hou Skyline positioned itself to play for a spot in the final after holding back Legacy 15-1 Adidas in the quarterfinals, 18-25, 25-18, 15-12. It prevented Legacy from adding another medal to its haul after earning bronze in Orlando. The other semifinal was close too, with Mintonette fending off Arizona Storm, 26-24, 25-22. Storm capped a late-season surge with an impressive run culminating with a bronze medal. Storm was a late Open qualifier, earning its bid at the very competitive Lone Star Classic qualifier in April. That was a sign that Storm was on the rise and the squad kept it going on the biggest stage. Storm held off upstart Pohaku 15-1 in the quarterfinals, 24-26, 25-23, 15-11. Pohaku handed SCVC 15 Roxy – which finished 9-1 and in ninth place overall – its only loss of the tournament with a dramatic three-set victory during challenge play on Day 3. Skyline had no issues in its quarterfinal, topping AVC Cle 15 Red in two, 25-14, 25-12. AVC was the biggest surprise of the gold bracket. The club came in ranked No. 31 in our Top 50 and received the No. 34 overall seed before coming out and playing its way to the top eight. Meanwhile, Mintonette had its hands full against Wave 15 Brennan in its quarterfinal contest. Wave pulled off a big upset in challenge play, taking down TAV 15 Black and reaching the top eight for the second year in a row. It just so happened that Wave also lost to Mintonette in three sets in the 14 Open quarterfinals a year ago. This go around, Mintonette prevailed, 25-12, 22-25, 15-9. When we wrote the 15 Open Preview and Predictions we speculated how amazing would it be for Skyline and Mintonette to meet again for a national championship. While it seemed like a possibility, it was hardly guaranteed or assured. We know the fickle nature of the sport, especially at the younger age groups and how crazy upsets happen all the time. We only have to look as far as last year in 15 Open when the lone at-large recipient in Alamo 15 Premier upset top-ranked Arizona Storm 15 Thunder for the gold medal. That both Skyline and Mintonette navigated the minefield that is the 15 Open division and set up a rematch is nothing short of incredible. Skyline winning a gold medal keeps an impressive run going for a trio of players in Madison Victoriano, Georgia Whann and Keoni Williams. They were part of Flyers 13 APX Bill’s gold medal effort in 13 Open at the 2021 USAV GJNC. The three were also on Flyers 14 APX Anthony last year when the club captured silver in 14 Open after falling to Mintonette. Also on the team a year ago were Skylar Jackson and Taylor Clarke. What’s impressive beyond that is the fact this is Victoriano’s fourth Open medal and she just wrapped up competing in 15 Open!! They all moved over from Flyers to Skyline this season. Skyline had just two holdovers from its 14s team a season ago in Megan Nguyen and Armie Hall. Layla Austin, Kiley Brooks, LeVariya Pinder and Reese Poerner were all newcomers who helped make up the redesigned roster. A roster that ends the season on top of the volleyball world.

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USAV 15 Open: Day 3 Show Stoppers And More

Of the eight 15 Open quarterfinalists at the USAV Girls Junior National Championships in Chicago, seven hail from vballrecruiter.com’s Top 20. The lone exception? It is AVC Cle 15 Red, which continued its march from No. 34 overall seed to the top eight!! AVC sits at No. 31 in our current Top 50, so it’s not like AVC was under-seeded. The club has simply performed when it matters most and that’s what this time of season is all about. AVC split pool matches, losing to TAV 15 Black but beating Club V 15 Ren Reed to advance to the challenge rounds. There, AVC seemed to run into the end of its road when it bumped up against Austin Skyline 15 Royal. Austin Skyline is a Top-10 team, coming into the tourey ranked No. 9 in our Top 50. Yet, AVC pulled off the surprise in winning in three, 15-25, 25-23, 15-13. The quarterfinals are set and look like this:   Though Wave 15 Brennan is ranked No. 15 in the country, it pulled a shocking upset when it swept past No. 7 TAV 15 Black in challenge play. Wave struggled a bit in the first round of pool play, then lost its first match on Day 3 to Austin Skyline. Wave bounced back to beat Aspire 15 Premier and eventually advance to the challenge rounds, where it took advantage of its opportunity and sent TAV packing. Another mini-upset took place with No. 18 Pohaku 15-1 outlasting No. 14 SCVC 15 Roxy in three in their challenge rounds. SCVC hadn’t lost in its first seven contests and it’s always tough when your first defeat keeps you from contending for a medal. However, Pohaku was resilient and now is one victory away from medaling. With Pokahu taking on No. 12 Arizona Storm 15 Thunder – which narrowly swept No. 13 Forza1 North 15 One in challenge play – in the quarterfinals, one of them is guaranteed to reach the podium. Outside that, the top contenders are still in the mix in top-ranked Skyline 15 Royal, No. 2 Mintonette Sports m.51, No. 4 Hou Skyline 14 Royal and No. 8 Legacy 15-1 Adidas. It’s going to take a monumental upset from Wave, Storm, Pohaku or AVC to keep one of those four clubs from hoisting the championship trophy. *** DAY 3 SHOW STOPPERS Lyla Stewart RS Mintonette Sports m.51: Stewart continues to impress on the right side. She’s made large strides from last season and has helped open the attack with her scoring ability. She has a very fast arm and can generate a ton of pace. Christa Wilburn OH Austin Skyline 15 Royal: Wilburn is a six-rotation contributor with a lively arm. She’s a threat front and back row and can blast balls from corner to corner. Riley Malloy OH Austin Skyline 15 Royal: Malloy is half of the outside duo that makes Austin Skyline so tough to deal with. She’s very, very long and can extend way up and hit at ridiculous angles. She too is also a threat front or back row. Abigail Lesagonicz RS Wave 15 Brennan: Lesagonicz had a helping hand in Wave reaching the quarterfinals. She brings much-needed size to the front row. She puts up a big block and she’s is able to score when called upon. Caroline Ward RS Boiler Jrs 15 Gold: Ward – a 5-star recruit from the Class of 2027 – is in a class of her own. She’s a next-level talent who presses well over the net on her block and gets way up on the attack and rockets winners. Cali Foster OH Boiler Jrs 15 Gold: Foster is a six-rotation mainstay who does it all at an above-average level, from her passing to her defending to her attacking. Taylor Clarke RS Skyline 15 Royal: Clarke – part of the Class of 2025 – is such a force at the net and game changer when she checks in. She skies and can absolutely crush balls. Skylar Jackson RS Skyline 15 Royal: Jackson was moved to the right side and was performing at a high level. She has a great arm and was hitting hard angled-shots consistently. Natalie Langston OH Academy 15 Diamond: Langston shoulders the offensive load and carries it well. She has a powerful arm capable of blasting straight through blocks. Avery Poulton OH Club V 15 Ren Reed: Poulton has a very bright future. She’s very lanky and is still figuring some things out, but watch out for her was she continues to develop as she flashed serious potential. *** Brooke Christoffersen RS Club V 15 Ren Reed: Christoffersen is another one to keep tabs on. She’s similar to Christoffersen in that she too is lanky and was showing plenty of upside. Kayla Nwabueze MB Legacy 15-1 Adidas: Nwabueze was owning the net on both sides of the ball in helping Legacy reach the quarterfinals. She was getting up on quick sets and hammering balls down. She then would turn around and deliver a solo emphatic stuff block to lift her team in that manner. Bella Lopez RS Madfrog 15 Green: Lopez is a rising star with insane athleticism and endless upside. She is a huge leaper with a lively arm and get up and send down impressive kill after impressive kill. Simone Heard RS Madfrog 15 Green: Heard is another athletic right side who keeps the attack going across the front row. She too gets up and smacks balls down with ease. Brooklyn Jenkins OH AZ Sky 15G: Jenkins is a physical attacker who brings the hammer down on the attack. She can simply overpower blockers at times. Grace Martin OH Pohaku 15-1: Martin had a huge role in Pohaku’s run to the quarterfinals and downing SCVC. She has a whippy arm and can send balls flying from sideline to sideline. She’s relentless too. She keeps coming and stays aggressive. Julia Anisimova L Pohaku 15-1: Anisimova was sensational in Pohaku’s victory over SCVC. She made huge digs

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USAV 14 Open: Day 3 Show Stoppers And More

In our preview and predictions of 14 Open at the USAV Girls Junior National Championships in Chicago we spoke about the big three of TAV 14 Black, Arizona Storm 14 Thunder and Tstreet 14 Carson. The best way to prevent one of those three from winning the gold medal was for them to take each other out first. Well, that’s going to happen in the quarterfinals, as one of the four showdowns features Arizona Storm facing Tstreet. The sides have only met up once so far, with Arizona Storm defeating Tstreet in the finals of the Red Rock Rave back in March. By not winning its pool, Tstreet dropped in seeding and thus created a situation where one of the two won’t medal. That’s crazy! Here’s how the quarterfinals stack up:   In putting together vballrecruiter.com’s 14s National Rankings this season, I felt like there was very little movement among the top teams in the country. With each update, it felt like the Top 10 hardly shifted. At times, I even questioned myself and if I was missing something? That’s not the case, as the quarterfinals demonstrate. Here’s where the quarterfinalists check in for our Top 50:   To think the top six teams in the country all reached the final eight is saying something. Drive Nation at No. 10 knocked off No. 7 Forza1 North 14 One in three sets, winning the third 18-16, or else it would have been the top seven! Furthermore, No. 8 OT 14 Laura was kept from reaching the quarterfinals by No. 4 Long Beach, so no shame there. Elevation 14 Molly, at No. 12, was also a win away from the quarters but fell to upstart Club V who was the only team outside the Top 10 to make the final eight. The top teams have been the top teams for a reason, namely their consistency from tournament to tournament. It led to a somewhat uneventful challenge round, which is usually one of the highlights of nationals. Only two of the eight contests went three sets, which is a low number given the circumstances. We mentioned Drive Nation fending off Forza North. Drive Nation was ahead 12-6 and 14-12 before trailing 16-15. The only other outing to go the distance featured Madfrog getting past Absolute 14 Black. But that one didn’t have nearly the same drama, as Madfrog owned the third set, 15-8. *** DAY 3 SHOW STOPPERS Cedra Talaga L Mizuno Long Beach 14 Rockstar: Rockstar is fitting because Talaga is a defensive rockstar. She’s high-octane and plays with tons of passion and emotion. She also patrols the back row well picking up shots and keeping rallies going. Ryah Brock OH Forza1 North 14 One: Brock is a hold-it-down outside who has a bright future with her athletic ability. She can get up and unload with her strong arm. She’s the go-to who Forza relies on in the clutch. Chloe Taylor S/RS Forza1 North 14 One: Taylor – part of the Class of 2028 – was a key piece in Forza almost making the quarterfinals. She’s a two-way player who also adds a bit of height to the front row. She’s a capable scorer and does well putting her hitters in good spots. Sanai Severloh MB Forza1 North 14 One: Severloh is one to keep tabs on as she grows and develops. She does nice things on the attack and hits with strength. Mariah Akinsola MB TAV 14 Black: Akinsola was a force at the net! She blasted balls down at, inside or just outside the 10-feet line on the regular. It made her nearly impossible to defend and reason why TAV rolled into the quarterfinals. Gentry Barker OH TAV 14 Black: Barker was another piece of the attack who defenses struggled to contain. She’s a bit undersized but can bring the heat for sure. Berkley France OH AZ Sky 14G: AZ Sky did well getting into challenge play but fell to Tstreet to miss out on the gold bracket. France showed no fear on the outside. She’s a bit undersized as well but doesn’t back down and stays aggressive. Ryan Spencer OH Skyline 14 Royal: Spencer was getting up and ripping balls sideline to sideline. She’s a six-rotation mainstay and featured piece of the attack. Morgan Meiring OH Elevation 14 Molly: Meiring was launching winners all over. She has a strong arm and can pound balls when she really connects. Vanessa Glenn OH Madfrog 14 Green: Glenn is an athletic outside who has no issues getting in the air and unleashing on defenses. She’s a quick jumper on top of that, so she’s tough to time up. Mackenzie Ratcliff MB Madfrog 14 Green: Ratcliff was showcasing her athleticism as well. She too gets up and has no trouble on the attack with her lively arm and ability to hit with pace. Brooklyn Sippio MB GP 14 Rox: GP was on the cusp of the gold bracket as well but fell in challenge play. Sippio is a rising talent with her length and reach at the net. It allows her to impact both sides of the ball with her scoring and blocking.

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USAV 15 Open: Day 3 All Red Hat Team

That we limit our daily All Red Hat Team to 10 players is a blessing and a curse. We want to keep the selections exclusive, and thus keep the picks to just 10. But, on a day like Day 3 of 15 Open the USAV Girls Junior Nationals Championships, many, many more deserved to be featured because there were more than 10 players who were our favorite. Still, we needed to trim it to 10, which we did below with our Day 3 All Red Hat Team. The goal is to highlight a daily team consisting of two players from each position – outside, middle, right side, setter and libero who – were our absolute favorite players of the day. Favorite doesn’t mean only a 5-star recruit or a familiar name. These are players who stood out to us for a variety of reasons, from amazing play to great energy or attitude or making key hustle plays. These are daily all-stars who really stood out the most to us for one reason or another. DAY 3 ALL RED HAT TEAM Aubree Deshetsky OH Legacy 15-1 Adidas: It’s almost impossible to reach the gold bracket of a divison this deep and competitive without everyone contributing. Deshetsky was filling her role to a tee. She’s a bit undersized but isn’t afraid to go at bigger blockers. She was taking aggressive, smart swings and with it providing Legacy yet another scoring punch and keeping it moving along. MaryKate Scheumann OH Team Pineapple 15 Black: Scheumann is a perfect All Red Hat Team selection but she’s another outside who keeps coming at you and won’t back down for anything. She’s a bit undersized but carries a big arm and hits a heavy ball. She takes a lot of swings and helped Team Pineapple reach the challenge rounds before falling to Legacy in three. Jaycee Mack MB Wave 15 Brennan: We featured Mack as a Day 3 Show Stopper. She’s part of the Class of 2027 and with her growth and development from last season through this season has been remarkable. She always had big, powerful arm but she’s added an inch or two as well as more strength and is becoming a force at the net. She hits with tons of power and is a big reason why Wave is in the gold bracket. Hannah Lee MB Madfrog 15 Green: Madfrog battled but came up a victory short of reaching the gold bracket. Lee played her part well. She’s a competitive, no-nonsense middle who takes big, aggressive swings. She has a strong arm and is a key part of the Madfrog attack when in system. Willow Weninger RS Pohaku 15-1: Weninger was a part of the reason why Pohaku reached the gold bracket and remains in contention for a medal. She’s a key ingredient on the right side with her scoring and blocking ability. She has a lively arm and can really connect with it. She also was coming through with timely blocks in challenge play to help her team advance. Sophia Davis RS Elevation 15 Tony: Davis was strong on Day 3 with her efforts from the right side. She’s a six-rotation right side who swings front and back row. She’s a capable attacker, with a big arm who blasts balls from side to side. Elle Mottola S WPVC 15 Armour Black: Winter Park wasn’t able to advance from the second round of pool play but Mottola’s skills were on full display. She has great on-court presence and command of the offense. She connects well with all her hitters and does things others setters aren’t doing, like running the middle outside the 10-foot line. Lily Rolfes S Arizona Storm 15 Thunder: We love what we saw from Rolfes. She’s a fiery competitor who helped lift her team into medal contention by reaching the gold bracket. She does well mixing up her sets and can really fire her team up with a timely block. Gabi Rodriguez L Madfrog 15 Green: Rodriguez was flying around the back row making plays. She’s a high-energy libero who passes well out of serve receive and covers well with her speed. Mya Capistrano L Forza1 North 15 One: Forza North fought on Day 3 but couldn’t quite get into the gold bracket with a tight loss to Arizona Storm. Capistrano was amazing in her role. She stood in against big hitters and did well picking off shots and extending rallies. She’s also quick and moves around the court with ease.

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USAV 14-15s: Day 4 Show Stoppers

One of the standout aspects that brought immense enjoyment during the last few days of the USAV Girls National Championships for ages 14-15 was the level of competition. The 14 and 15 Open divisions featured loaded fields, but the same could be said for the 14-15 National-Patriot divisions and numerous other teams in attendance. It was truly impressive to witness the incredible talent and skill exhibited by so many young girls who were absolutely dominating the court. Their passion and determination to excel in the sport of volleyball was inspiring and it was a testament to the bright future of the game. Among the teams that caught my attention every time I walked by was Mauloa 15 Green. They stood out with their scrappy and powerful style of play. Their determination and tenacity on the court demanded attention, making them a captivating team to watch. One match that I truly enjoyed watching was the championship match between 1st Alliance 15 Gold and MKE Sting 15 Gold in the 15 National Division. It was awesome to witness the fierce competition on both sides, as the pins swung with fiery intensity. The liberos’ relentless defense and the relentless offensive attacks from both teams added to the excitement. With both teams employing a 5-1 system and their setters playing all the way around, the match offered a unique dynamic that showcased the versatility and skill of the players. The presence of dominant middle blockers creating impactful plays added an extra layer of excitement to the game.  Throughout the day, there were a few players who truly stood out and left a lasting impression. One such player was Olivia Henry, an exceptional outside hitter from ASEVC 15 Premier. Her ability to effortlessly hit over the block showcased her incredible power and skill. Another athlete who caught my attention was Marlee Sivak from MKE Sting 15 Gold. Her fierce swings on the outside were relentless. Two more remarkable athletes that come to mind from the 14s are Corina Barrera, a six-rotation outside hitter from STVA 14 Mizuno, and Kristen Sheehy, a formidable middle blocker from AZ REV 14 Premier. Barrera’s versatility and skills as an outside hitter were truly impressive, as she consistently showcased her ability to contribute in all areas of the game. On the other hand, Sheehy’s imposing presence at the net with her massive blocks made her a force to be reckoned with.  DAY 4 SHOW STOPPERS  Lundin Leitch S Surfside 14 Loriann: One word, SPITFIRE. Everytime I watched this squad Leitch was running down balls off the court. She was running a 5-1 and was undersized. That didn’t stop her.  Lillie Duitsman OH Club One AZ 14Platinum: Duitsman is a six-rotation outside who was providing great offense but it was her defense that caught my attention.  Hope Erdman MB Tejas 14 Black Marco: Erdman was taking big swings in the middle and on the right. She brought a ton of fire to her squad.  Corina Barrera OH STVA 14 Mizuno: Barrera, like I mentioned above, was doing it all well. She has a no-fear attitude on the court.  Saniya Reynolds MB HJV 14 ELITE: Reynolds showed so much upside and is someone to keep tabs on as she continues to develop. She was making herself known by getting her hands on lots of balls. Korynn Mayo OH UNITED 14’s Evren: Mayo plays with lots of energy and a high spirit. She has a good arm and is fearless, as she keeps coming at defenses time and time again. Aleigha Zollicoffee MB KC Power 14 Black: While Zollicoffee might not be as tall as some middles, she brings a level of physicality to the court that is impressive. Alexa Espin MB/RS Miami Hype 14N Nekane: Espin is quick off the ground with a quick arm swing that beats defenses on the reg.  Kristen Sheehy MB AZ REV 14 Premier: Sheehy is both a offensive and defensive threat on the court. She can pound balls in the middle.  Lara Matta OH Tampa North 15 Black: Matta is a wirey outside with a nice bounce and swing. She’s a six-rotation threat.  Olivia Henry OH ASEVC 15 Premier: Henry was literally hitting over blocks. And what is truly scary is she is playing up a division.  Piper Batie OH Ozark Juniors 15 Elite: Batie has a big arm and hits with a heavy hand. She smacked a few balls down with authority.  Kaia Ciszewski OH Tstreet 15-Curtis: Ciszewski is a six-rotation outside with strong ball control skills. She sees the court well and has a variety of shots to throw at defenses.  Ashlyn Seay OH Drive Nation 15-Red: Seay was letting loose on balls for impressive kills. She was also steady in serve receive. Macy McAmis L Jupiter Elite 15E: McAmis is a gritty libero who owns the back row. She’s a sound passer and scrappy on defense.  Frankie Jones MB Sunshine 15 Westside: Jones is an athletic middle who moves well. She has a quick leap and nice arm that makes her a scoring threat on in-system passes.  Chloe Garcia S/RS 305 15 Alan: Garcia is an up-and-coming prospect and someone to keep tabs on. She’s an athletic setter who gets to the ball and sets with consistency and accuracy. She also a strong attacker with a solid arm. Kiana Johnson L OJVA 15-1 Gold: Johnson helps hold down serve receive with her consistent passing. She also does well making tough defensive plays. Sadie Snyder OH AZ REV 15 Premier: A go-to on the left, Synder carries a large offensive load. She has a good arm and a strong knack for scoring to help pace the offense. Kelly Valdez L Mauloa 15’s Green Mauloa: Valdez literally was “nails” for passing. She is also quick on her feet and scrappy to boot.  Ava McBride OH/RS Actyve 15-Black JD: McBride is a dynamic attacker. She scores well from the pins. And her line shot is quite impressive.  Simone Searles OH A5 15 Bob: Searles brings a bit of physicality to the lineup. She’s a strong hitter who can unleash big kills at times. Mia Crowley OH/RS TAV Houston 15 Adidas:

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USAV 14-15s: Day 3 Show Stoppers

Entering the third day of the USAV Girls Junior National Championships, one is immediately immersed in an atmosphere of fierce competition and electric energy. Teams are fighting relentlessly for a spot in the coveted gold bracket which sets up an electric environment. Friday, across all divisions, the level of intensity knew no bounds. From the powerful hitters to the defenders displaying unwavering tenacity, the relentless display of skill and passion made every match thrilling to watch.  In a crossover matchup, WPVC 14 Armour Black faced off against 1United 14N Bill. With both teams leaving it all on the court, the battle was an intense back-and-forth affair. Ultimately, WPVC emerged victorious after a hard-fought three-set match 23-25, 25-17, 15-5. Isabel Incinelli was a major factor in her team’s hard fought win.  In a crossover match between Milwaulkee Sting 15 Gold and Jupiter Elite 15E, libero Cassidy Bruns of Milwaulkee Sting owned the back court with her sensational performance. Her defensive prowess and energy were a joy to watch.  As the day unfolded, surprising upsets occurred, reminding us of the unpredictable nature of the game. Who’s ready for Day 4?!  DAY 3 SHOW STOPPERS Jaiden Harris OH Areté 14 Navy Telos: Harris was a lot of fun to watch. She was swinging everywhere with zero fear and coming up big.  Camryn Corso OH 1United 14N Bill: Corso, a six-rotation outside hitter, was swinging well everywhere on the court.  Isabel Incinelli MB WPVC 14 Armour Black: Incinelli is a huge factor on the court. She is a wall defensively at the net while offensively can hammer in the middle.  Lucy Ripley MB FC Elite 14 Navy: This is my first time seeing Ripley play and I was impressed with her court presence in the middle. She is a big swinger for her squad. Kylee Mayes L NORCO Black 14-1: Mayes is a scrappy libero who can read the ball incredibly well. She is also fast with no fear.  Kaelyn Bjorklund S/RS  Northern Lights 14-1: She can set on the move as well and does a nice job of connecting with all her hitters. She also is an offensive weapon in the front row.  Taylor Harrington MB Paramount VBC 14’s: Harrington is an imposing presence at the net and will make teams pay if the pass or set is too tight as she touches everything.  Allyn Hilt OH Surfside 14 Loriann: Hilt was bringing the fire and heat on the outside when I was watching.  Camille Csernik OH TX LEGACY 14 ELITE: Csernik was getting after it with her attack. She has a great jump with a fluid swing.  Makenna Sanders OH Premier Nebraska 14 Black: Sanders has a cannon for an arm. She is fluid and a huge threat on the outside.  Sarah Hickman RS HJV 15 ELITE: Hickman is a big weapon across the front row. She provides a punch with her scoring and blocking. Sydney Clark OH Areté 15 Navy Telos: Clark, an undersized outside hitter, is powerful and fearless. It’s a great combination, as she gets up well too and lets it rip whether front or back row. Emerson Boyd S/RS Areté 15 Navy Telos: Boyd showed what she can bring to a lineup with her setting and hitting abilities. She was delivering with consistent location when setting. Cassidy Bruns  L MKE Sting 15 Gold Sting: Bruns was playing lights out defense. She was literally everywhere on the court.   Ryea Jackson MB Drive Nation 15-Red: Jackson finds ways to score and also comes up with massive blocks.  Jordan Valentine OH 1United 15N Dylan: Valentine is a firecracker on the court. She also brings the heat and is aggressive with her attacks. Ellah Derrer MB Iowa Select 15 Mizuno: Derrer was a wall defensively for her squad. She was touching lots of swings and giving her defenders chances to make plays behind her.  Sophia Towle OH COAST 15-1:  Towle is a good hitter with a good arm and can score consistently. Emerson Jones MB MADFROG 15’S N BLACK: Jones can put up a sound block and give attackers trouble with it. She was also packing a punch offensively.  Makenna Hertless MB STVA 15 Mizuno: Hertless is quick and moves very well. She carries a good arm and proved to be a consistent, reliable scorer when called upon. Jenna Thedford  L HOU STELLAR 15 ELITE: Thedford is a defensive leader. She was getting her hands on a lot of balls and helping keep rallies alive.  Mollie VanDeusen S JJVA 15 Teal: VanDeusen, setting a 5-1, was on point and steady with her play. She was running the offense very well. Britni Silver OH ECJVC 15 National: Silver is one to keep an eye on as she continues to develop. She was taking aggressive swings and showcasing a quick arm that was lighting defenses up. Camille Huff MB LAV 15 National Black: Huff makes an impact on both sides with her scoring and blocking. LK LaMonica S A5 15-2 Victor: LaMonica did well in her roles as the back row setter. She was locating with consistency and making defensive plays as well. She’s a vocal leader too. Lilly Boatner RS TAV 15 Blue: Boatner was taking aggressive swings, putting the heat on her swings and scoring in clutch moments.  Sofia Guerrero-Wilson MB A5 15-Bob: Guerrero-Wilson was giving defenses something to think about with her ability to run the slide effectively. She also has a high reach when attacking in the middle.  Olivia Branum S OP2 15-1: Branum is a fluid, smooth setter who can run tempo on any set.  Chalei Reid OH Mauloa 15’s Green: Reid is an athletic outside who hits a heavy and aggressive ball consistently.

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USAV 15 Open: Day 4 All Red Hat Team

The volleyball world received the rematch between vballrecruiter.com’s top two teams in the country as No. 1 Skyline 15 Royal swept past No. 2 Mintonette Sports m.51 to capture the USAV 15 Open gold medal Saturday in Chicago. It was less than weeks ago when the two sides squared off in Orlando, with Mintonette winning there and claiming the AAU 15 Open championship. As for the final day of 15 Open competition in Chicago, it was lights-out and easily the best volleyball we witnessed all season. Picking the Day 4 All Red Hat Team was no easy task as we present our 10 players below. The goal is to highlight a daily team consisting of two players from each position – outside, middle, right side, setter and libero who – were our absolute favorite players of the day. Favorite doesn’t mean only a 5-star recruit or a familiar name. These are players who stood out to us for a variety of reasons, from amazing play to great energy or attitude or making key hustle plays. These are daily all-stars who really stood out the most to us for one reason or another. DAY 4 ALL RED HAT TEAM Halle Thompson OH Hou Skyline 15 Royal: If this tournament were a video game, Thompson would be the cheat code! The 6-2 high-flying outside established herself as the class of the division. About the only thing she can’t do on the attack is score with a bicycle kick. Other than that, the only way to stop her is to hope she misses her swing. She’s so long and athletic and hits so high and fast that she overwhelms defenses. Layla Hoying OH Mintonette Sports m.51: Hoying’s all-around game was on full display as Mintonette finished with the silver medal. She’s such a strong player physically and is a solid passer and defender out of the back row. And though she’s a bit undersized compared to other outsides in the division, she can get up and send balls straight down without a problem. Keoni Williams MB Skyline 15 Royal: The 6-4 Williams takes over the net like few can. She’s so long and takes up a lot of space with her reach. Even when she’s not touching or blocking balls, she’s still impacting hitters’ swings in order to avoid her. Offensively, she’s a force who can hammer balls over the block at tough-to-defend angles. LeVariya Pinder MB Skyline 15 Royal: Pinder plays outside in high school and you can see in the way she attacks out of the middle. At 6-0, she’s not short but not necessarily tall compared to Williams. Still, Pinder is quick and gets up in a hurry. It allows her to be impactful at the net scoring and blocking. Taylor Clarke RS Skyline 15 Royal: Clarke – part of the Class of 2025 – is a game-changing right side with the way she can score and open up the attack. The dynamic of Skyline’s offense complete changes when she checks in, opening the attack and providing another high-flying option who can go over or around blocks with ease. Willow Weninger RS Pohaku 15-1: We love what Weninger brings to the lineup. She’s a fiery right side who also changes the look of the attack when she’s front row. She’s lanky with a lively arm and is a featured part of the attack who defenses must respect and be ready for. Madison Victoriano S Skyline 15 Royal: All Victoriano does is win! Saturday marked her fourth Open medal as Skyline lifted the championship trophy. She’s a quick setter who moves very well and does a nice job getting her feet to the ball and delivering. She has a soft touch and locates well. Eva Long S Legacy 15-1 Adidas: We love watching Long compete because she’s such a gamer. You can see the intensity she plays with but she also does well playing under control. She does well directing the attack and mixing up her sets and getting all her hitters involved. Emma Cugino L Mintonette Sports m.51: Few defend and patrol the back row like Cugino. She’s a total stud and a defensive stalwart. She’s a high-level passer and defender. She also has a great hands and does very well setting off balls to help keep Mintonette in system. Henlee Moszkowicz L Hou Skyline 15 Royal: Moszkowicz was arguably our favorite player from Day 4 and that’s saying something. Hou Skyline is known for its relentless attack but she was bringing a defensive edge and tenacity to the court. She was making tons of plays keeping rallies alive and standing in against big-swinging hitters.

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USAV 14 Open: Day 4 All Red Hat Team

In the end, no one could prevent TAV 14 Black from taking its place on the top step of the podium as the club captured the 14 Open USAV national championship Saturday in Chicago. With the gold bracket playing out on the final day of competition, the intensity level was exactly as you imagined it would be. Off the charts. It produced both amazing team and individual play, which leads us to presenting our Day 4 All Red Hat Team. The goal is to highlight a daily team consisting of two players from each position – outside, middle, right side, setter and libero who – were our absolute favorite players of the day. Favorite doesn’t mean only a 5-star recruit or a familiar name. These are players who stood out to us for a variety of reasons, from amazing play to great energy or attitude or making key hustle plays. These are daily all-stars who really stood out the most to us for one reason or another. DAY 4 ALL RED HAT TEAM Ella Olson OH Tstreet 14 Carson: Olson was easily in the top tier of players in both performance and fun factor. She’s a pure volleyball player who does everything at a high level. She flies around the court in the back row defending and laying out for balls. She’s a sound passer out of serve receive. As she’s a tough cover on the attack with her beach smarts and ability to mix in a wide variety of shots to frustrate defenses with. Ava Burgess OH Club V 14 Ren Silver: Club V deserves immense credit for being the only team outside our Top 10 to reach the gold bracket. Burgess is not only a blossoming talent who has next-level written all over her, she’s also a weapon currently and was a big part of the team’s success. She’s a lanky outside with a great arm and ability to blast balls from sideline to sideline. We love the emotion and passion she plays with (check out the photo above). That’s someone you want on your team when you have to win a match. Kendall Omoruyi MB Arizona Storm 14 Thunder: Spectators came for the volleyball and received a free blocking clinic in the process. To say the 6-4 Omoruyi owns the net is to say water is wet. She gets up and presses her arms over like few can and she’s a total game-changer as a result. She’s a point scorer with her blocking, as well as with her big arm. She gets up well over the block and can pound balls down at ridiculous angles. Megan Hodges MB Tstreet 14 Carson: Hodges – part of the Class of 2028 – showed plenty of what is to come in the future. She’s another presence in the middle with her size and she too has the ability to impact both sides of the net with her blocking and attacking. She was making plays at the net in Tstreet’s three-set setback to Arizona Storm in the quarterfinals. She also plays with a lot of energy and passion and it’s fun to see. Simrin Adams RS Mizuno Long Beach 14 Rockstar: Adams isn’t the biggest or hardest-hitting right side but she is effective in her role and she plays with great on-court demeanor and hustle. She’s one of the few right sides who passes out of serve receive too, adding value there. She’s also a smart hitter who can send balls down the line with pace or throw in a cagey off speed shot to catch the defenses on its heels. Brynn Stephens S/RS TAV 14 Black: Stephens brings so much to the floor with her setting and hitting. She’s also a fierce competitor. It doesn’t hurt that she’s also long and is the total package. She’s a sharp setter who can dish to any spot with consistent accuracy, whether in front or behind her. As an attacker, watch out. She can extend way up and rip balls down as well as anyone in the division. Sophee Peterson S/RS TAV 14 Black: The word that comes to mind with Peterson is ease. We wrote about her earlier in the tournament with her setting, hitting and defending. And she does it all while making it look easy. She’s a smooth setter with a soft touch and she too can deliver balls in front or behind her with great accuracy. She plays great defense and when it comes to hitting she doesn’t have the length of Stephens but she’s just effective in scoring points. Zamari Christensen S Club V 14 Ren Silver: Christensen is a high-octane setter who zips around the court. She too played a big role in Club V’s run. She does well getting to the ball and has a clean, consistent release. She does well connecting with her hitters. Ansley Shafer L TAV 14 Black: What we love about Shafer is she doesn’t blink. She’s not afraid to stand in against the biggest of hitters in order to make a play and keep the rally alive. She’s also quick and makes up ground in a hurry when covering. Nafanua Alofipo L Club V 14 Ren Silver: Alofipo was among the best liberos in the division and has no issues taking care of the defensive duties. She too is a quick libero who flies around the court making plays. She’s not one to challenge in serve receive as she’s an on-point passer.

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USAV 16 Open: Preview And Predictions (FREE)

Helping to wrap up the USAV Girls Junior National Championships in Chicago is the 16 Open division, which runs July 3-6. The top teams have taken turns beating each other up all season and it’s going to create a frenzied finish to the calendar. Below, we take a look at what to watch for and reveal our predicted winner. 16 OPEN Number of Teams: 36 vballrecruiter.com National Rankings:   5-Star Athletes to Know:   Outlook: The top six seeds virtually mirror our Top 50 National Rankings. 1st Alliance is tops in both categories, with a slight difference with the next two. We have Drive Nation 16 Red at No. 2 in the country, followed by No. 3 Surfside 16 PV Legends. As for the seedings, those two are switched. Hou Skyline 16 Royal, HJV 16 Elite and Arizona Storm 16 Thunder follow at Nos. 4, 5 and 6 respectively in both our rankings and seedings. The first big deviation comes next with ID Crush 16 Bower at No. 7. We have ID Crush at No. 23 in the rankings. It’s true ID Crush finished first at three qualifiers in PNQ, Salt Lake City and Far Western but those were not the toughest qualifiers. ID Crush did participate in the Red Rock Rave, where it made the gold pools but finished tied for ninth. AAU 16 Open champ Adidas KiVA 16 Red checks in as the No. 12 overall seed. The two at-large recipients in Legacy 16-1 Adidas and Mich Elite 16 Mizuno received respectable seeds at No. 13 and 16 respectively. MKE Sting 16 Gold, which is No. 12 in our Top 50 National Rankings, received a lower seed than expected at No. 22. Prediction: Let’s first look at which teams are going to break pool, then we’ll pick the quarterfinalists and eventual winner. ROUND 1 Pool 1 1st Alliance 4-1 OT 16 JP 4-1 Legacy 3-2 Wave 2-3 Madfrog 2-3 Vision 0-5 Pool 2 Surfside 5-0 KiVA 4-1 Tribe 3-2 Austin Skyline 2-3 MAVS 1-4 Triangle 0-5 Pool 3 Drive Nation 5-0 Circle City 4-1 MKE Sting 3-2 GP 2-3 Alamo 1-4 Coast 0-5 Pool 4 Nebraska One 5-0 Hou Skyline 4-1 Mich Elite 3-2 AVC Cle 2-3 OT 16 Roberto 1-4 Vegas Aces 0-5 Pool 5 A5 4-1 TAV 4-1 HJV 3-2 HPSTL 3-2 NorCal 1-4 Oaks 0-5 Pool 6 Arizona Storm 5-0 Northern Lights 4-1 Vaqueras 3-2 ID Crush 2-3 Premier Nebraska 1-4 Long Beach 0-5 *** Quarterfinalists 1st Alliance Drive Nation Hou Skyline Arizona Storm A5 Circle City HPSTL Austin Skyline Final 1st Alliance d Arizona Storm Bronzes Cirlce City; Drive Nation

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USAV 14 Open: Gold Medal Rundown

If a season of dominance was to turn into four days of vulnerability, TAV never let on as its time in Chicago was less a tournament and more of a coronation. There was never doubt surrounding TAV’s place in the 14 Open division, which it cemented with a sweep of national No. 2 Arizona Storm 14 Thunder, 25-19, 25-16, in Saturday’s championship match. The North Texas Region club dropped just two matches entering the USAV Girls Junior National Championships in Chicago. One came to Drive Nation 14 Red in regional play. The other was to Tstreet 14 Carson in the final of the Salt Lake City Showdown qualifier in April. Other than that, TAV has been untouchable and was a heavy favorite to claim the gold medal. Yet, we’ve seen similar scenarios before when the fairytale ending disappears in a blink of an upset and leaves teams heartbroken and in despair. And that’s with a full roster available, a luxury TAV was not afforded as it chased the championship trophy in Chicago. Weeks ago TAV lost one half of its starting middle duo when Nyla Livings broke her hand and would not be able to participate. Even when TAV was most vulnerable this season it did not matter. The opening match provided the perfect opportunity for an upset and though Forza1 14 One was up for the challenge, TAV still found a way in winning in three, 21-25, 25-14, 15-11. TAV dropped just one more set the rest of the way, with it coming in a three-game victory over A5 14 Helen, 23-25, 25-16, 15-10, in the final outing of the first round of pool play. What TAV did during elimination matches was frightening, beginning with its dominant sweep of Rage 14 Garren, 25-10, 25-8, in challenge play. If the gold bracket was supposed to offer stiffer competition, it certainly didn’t play out that way on Day 4. Up first was Mizuno Long Beach 14 Rockstar – ranked No. 4 in our Top 50. It proved to be a warm-up of sorts, as TAV cruised, 25-11, 25-14. Next up was Skyline 14 Royal – which checked in at No. 6 in our Top 50. It was over just as quickly, with TAV sweeping, 25-14, 25-21. The championship match was surely meant to be different. There TAV was to face Arizona Storm in a semifinal rematch from Triple Crown back in February. TAV took that meeting in three, 25-21, 17-25, 15-9, yet Saturday’s clash never materialized in the same manner. Arizona Storm reached the final in part because of its dramatic victory over No. 3 Tstreet 14 Carson in the quarterfinals. With Tstreet falling to at-large recipient Tejas 14 Black in the first round of pool play and taking second place, the two sides met a round earlier than the original seedings would have dictated. Tstreet came out on fire and Storm had no answers. But the break in action between sets offered time for Storm to regroup, which it did before squeaking out the victory in three, 15-25, 25-23, 15-12. With Arizona Storm taking it to Madfrog 14 Green, 25-10, 25-13, in the semis, the clash between the top two teams in the country was all set but there was no stopping TAV. Madfrog was also involved in a thrilling quarterfinal with upstart Club V 14 Ren Silver. Club V was the only quarterfinalist not ranked in the Top 10 of our national rankings. Club V checked in at No. 29 and was within points of medaling. However, Madfrog held firm and prevailed in three, 17-25, 25-18, 15-13, to clinch its spot on the podium with a bronze medal. Skyline earned its bronze by sweeping past No. 10 Drive Nation 14 Red, 25-15, 25-19, in its quarterfinal encounter. It was Drive Nation’s only setback of the tournament.

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USAV 15 Open: Gold Medal Rundown

A trilogy anyone? If there’s any possible way imaginable to get a third national championship showdown between the top two teams in the country we have to go all in toward making it happen! For the second time in less than two weeks top-ranked Skyline 15 Royal and No. 2 Mintonette Sports m.51 stared across the net at each other with a gold medal in the balance. Mintonette outlasted Skyline 11 days ago in Orlando and with the three-set victory captured the AAU 15 Open championship. Arriving in Chicago, Mintonette was seeking a double-double of sorts. As last year’s 14 Open champions, Mintonette was looking to go back-to-back in winning USAV national championships, plus adding to the its national championship toll in 2023 by claiming another gold medal and establishing itself as the undisputed best squad in the nation. That we as fans were lucky and fortunate enough to see the two best teams in the country work their way through four days of competition to earn a championship rematch was remarkable in itself. Other than the location, not much changed in terms of the matchup between the two sides. Mintonette desperately needed to win the serve and pass battle as it did in Orlando. But Skyline played much cleaner volleyball, which allowed Skyline to run its offense more effectively and put more pressure on Mintonette. It led to a tight sweep, 26-24, 25-21, as Skyline evened the national championship series. It’s a shame we won’t get a third clash. And though Mintonette did win the AAU championship, given the depth and strength of field in Chicago, we fully expect Skyline to end the season as the No. 1 team in our Top 50 National Rankings. Joining Skyline and Mintonette on the podium were bronze medalists Hou Skyline 15 Royal and Arizona Storm 15 Thunder. Hou Skyline entered the four-day event ranked No. 4 in our Top 50 and performed accordingly. Hou Skyline gave Skyline a major fight in the semifinals before Skyline narrowly pulled out the sweep, 26-24, 25-23. Hou Skyline positioned itself to play for a spot in the final after holding back Legacy 15-1 Adidas in the quarterfinals, 18-25, 25-18, 15-12. It prevented Legacy from adding another medal to its haul after earning bronze in Orlando. The other semifinal was close too, with Mintonette fending off Arizona Storm, 26-24, 25-22. Storm capped a late-season surge with an impressive run culminating with a bronze medal. Storm was a late Open qualifier, earning its bid at the very competitive Lone Star Classic qualifier in April. That was a sign that Storm was on the rise and the squad kept it going on the biggest stage. Storm held off upstart Pohaku 15-1 in the quarterfinals, 24-26, 25-23, 15-11. Pohaku handed SCVC 15 Roxy – which finished 9-1 and in ninth place overall – its only loss of the tournament with a dramatic three-set victory during challenge play on Day 3. Skyline had no issues in its quarterfinal, topping AVC Cle 15 Red in two, 25-14, 25-12. AVC was the biggest surprise of the gold bracket. The club came in ranked No. 31 in our Top 50 and received the No. 34 overall seed before coming out and playing its way to the top eight. Meanwhile, Mintonette had its hands full against Wave 15 Brennan in its quarterfinal contest. Wave pulled off a big upset in challenge play, taking down TAV 15 Black and reaching the top eight for the second year in a row. It just so happened that Wave also lost to Mintonette in three sets in the 14 Open quarterfinals a year ago. This go around, Mintonette prevailed, 25-12, 22-25, 15-9. When we wrote the 15 Open Preview and Predictions we speculated how amazing would it be for Skyline and Mintonette to meet again for a national championship. While it seemed like a possibility, it was hardly guaranteed or assured. We know the fickle nature of the sport, especially at the younger age groups and how crazy upsets happen all the time. We only have to look as far as last year in 15 Open when the lone at-large recipient in Alamo 15 Premier upset top-ranked Arizona Storm 15 Thunder for the gold medal. That both Skyline and Mintonette navigated the minefield that is the 15 Open division and set up a rematch is nothing short of incredible. Skyline winning a gold medal keeps an impressive run going for a trio of players in Madison Victoriano, Georgia Whann and Keoni Williams. They were part of Flyers 13 APX Bill’s gold medal effort in 13 Open at the 2021 USAV GJNC. The three were also on Flyers 14 APX Anthony last year when the club captured silver in 14 Open after falling to Mintonette. Also on the team a year ago were Skylar Jackson and Taylor Clarke. What’s impressive beyond that is the fact this is Victoriano’s fourth Open medal and she just wrapped up competing in 15 Open!! They all moved over from Flyers to Skyline this season. Skyline had just two holdovers from its 14s team a season ago in Megan Nguyen and Armie Hall. Layla Austin, Kiley Brooks, LeVariya Pinder and Reese Poerner were all newcomers who helped make up the redesigned roster. A roster that ends the season on top of the volleyball world.

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USAV 15 Open: Day 3 Show Stoppers And More

Of the eight 15 Open quarterfinalists at the USAV Girls Junior National Championships in Chicago, seven hail from vballrecruiter.com’s Top 20. The lone exception? It is AVC Cle 15 Red, which continued its march from No. 34 overall seed to the top eight!! AVC sits at No. 31 in our current Top 50, so it’s not like AVC was under-seeded. The club has simply performed when it matters most and that’s what this time of season is all about. AVC split pool matches, losing to TAV 15 Black but beating Club V 15 Ren Reed to advance to the challenge rounds. There, AVC seemed to run into the end of its road when it bumped up against Austin Skyline 15 Royal. Austin Skyline is a Top-10 team, coming into the tourey ranked No. 9 in our Top 50. Yet, AVC pulled off the surprise in winning in three, 15-25, 25-23, 15-13. The quarterfinals are set and look like this:   Though Wave 15 Brennan is ranked No. 15 in the country, it pulled a shocking upset when it swept past No. 7 TAV 15 Black in challenge play. Wave struggled a bit in the first round of pool play, then lost its first match on Day 3 to Austin Skyline. Wave bounced back to beat Aspire 15 Premier and eventually advance to the challenge rounds, where it took advantage of its opportunity and sent TAV packing. Another mini-upset took place with No. 18 Pohaku 15-1 outlasting No. 14 SCVC 15 Roxy in three in their challenge rounds. SCVC hadn’t lost in its first seven contests and it’s always tough when your first defeat keeps you from contending for a medal. However, Pohaku was resilient and now is one victory away from medaling. With Pokahu taking on No. 12 Arizona Storm 15 Thunder – which narrowly swept No. 13 Forza1 North 15 One in challenge play – in the quarterfinals, one of them is guaranteed to reach the podium. Outside that, the top contenders are still in the mix in top-ranked Skyline 15 Royal, No. 2 Mintonette Sports m.51, No. 4 Hou Skyline 14 Royal and No. 8 Legacy 15-1 Adidas. It’s going to take a monumental upset from Wave, Storm, Pohaku or AVC to keep one of those four clubs from hoisting the championship trophy. *** DAY 3 SHOW STOPPERS Lyla Stewart RS Mintonette Sports m.51: Stewart continues to impress on the right side. She’s made large strides from last season and has helped open the attack with her scoring ability. She has a very fast arm and can generate a ton of pace. Christa Wilburn OH Austin Skyline 15 Royal: Wilburn is a six-rotation contributor with a lively arm. She’s a threat front and back row and can blast balls from corner to corner. Riley Malloy OH Austin Skyline 15 Royal: Malloy is half of the outside duo that makes Austin Skyline so tough to deal with. She’s very, very long and can extend way up and hit at ridiculous angles. She too is also a threat front or back row. Abigail Lesagonicz RS Wave 15 Brennan: Lesagonicz had a helping hand in Wave reaching the quarterfinals. She brings much-needed size to the front row. She puts up a big block and she’s is able to score when called upon. Caroline Ward RS Boiler Jrs 15 Gold: Ward – a 5-star recruit from the Class of 2027 – is in a class of her own. She’s a next-level talent who presses well over the net on her block and gets way up on the attack and rockets winners. Cali Foster OH Boiler Jrs 15 Gold: Foster is a six-rotation mainstay who does it all at an above-average level, from her passing to her defending to her attacking. Taylor Clarke RS Skyline 15 Royal: Clarke – part of the Class of 2025 – is such a force at the net and game changer when she checks in. She skies and can absolutely crush balls. Skylar Jackson RS Skyline 15 Royal: Jackson was moved to the right side and was performing at a high level. She has a great arm and was hitting hard angled-shots consistently. Natalie Langston OH Academy 15 Diamond: Langston shoulders the offensive load and carries it well. She has a powerful arm capable of blasting straight through blocks. Avery Poulton OH Club V 15 Ren Reed: Poulton has a very bright future. She’s very lanky and is still figuring some things out, but watch out for her was she continues to develop as she flashed serious potential. *** Brooke Christoffersen RS Club V 15 Ren Reed: Christoffersen is another one to keep tabs on. She’s similar to Christoffersen in that she too is lanky and was showing plenty of upside. Kayla Nwabueze MB Legacy 15-1 Adidas: Nwabueze was owning the net on both sides of the ball in helping Legacy reach the quarterfinals. She was getting up on quick sets and hammering balls down. She then would turn around and deliver a solo emphatic stuff block to lift her team in that manner. Bella Lopez RS Madfrog 15 Green: Lopez is a rising star with insane athleticism and endless upside. She is a huge leaper with a lively arm and get up and send down impressive kill after impressive kill. Simone Heard RS Madfrog 15 Green: Heard is another athletic right side who keeps the attack going across the front row. She too gets up and smacks balls down with ease. Brooklyn Jenkins OH AZ Sky 15G: Jenkins is a physical attacker who brings the hammer down on the attack. She can simply overpower blockers at times. Grace Martin OH Pohaku 15-1: Martin had a huge role in Pohaku’s run to the quarterfinals and downing SCVC. She has a whippy arm and can send balls flying from sideline to sideline. She’s relentless too. She keeps coming and stays aggressive. Julia Anisimova L Pohaku 15-1: Anisimova was sensational in Pohaku’s victory over SCVC. She made huge digs

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USAV 14 Open: Day 3 Show Stoppers And More

In our preview and predictions of 14 Open at the USAV Girls Junior National Championships in Chicago we spoke about the big three of TAV 14 Black, Arizona Storm 14 Thunder and Tstreet 14 Carson. The best way to prevent one of those three from winning the gold medal was for them to take each other out first. Well, that’s going to happen in the quarterfinals, as one of the four showdowns features Arizona Storm facing Tstreet. The sides have only met up once so far, with Arizona Storm defeating Tstreet in the finals of the Red Rock Rave back in March. By not winning its pool, Tstreet dropped in seeding and thus created a situation where one of the two won’t medal. That’s crazy! Here’s how the quarterfinals stack up:   In putting together vballrecruiter.com’s 14s National Rankings this season, I felt like there was very little movement among the top teams in the country. With each update, it felt like the Top 10 hardly shifted. At times, I even questioned myself and if I was missing something? That’s not the case, as the quarterfinals demonstrate. Here’s where the quarterfinalists check in for our Top 50:   To think the top six teams in the country all reached the final eight is saying something. Drive Nation at No. 10 knocked off No. 7 Forza1 North 14 One in three sets, winning the third 18-16, or else it would have been the top seven! Furthermore, No. 8 OT 14 Laura was kept from reaching the quarterfinals by No. 4 Long Beach, so no shame there. Elevation 14 Molly, at No. 12, was also a win away from the quarters but fell to upstart Club V who was the only team outside the Top 10 to make the final eight. The top teams have been the top teams for a reason, namely their consistency from tournament to tournament. It led to a somewhat uneventful challenge round, which is usually one of the highlights of nationals. Only two of the eight contests went three sets, which is a low number given the circumstances. We mentioned Drive Nation fending off Forza North. Drive Nation was ahead 12-6 and 14-12 before trailing 16-15. The only other outing to go the distance featured Madfrog getting past Absolute 14 Black. But that one didn’t have nearly the same drama, as Madfrog owned the third set, 15-8. *** DAY 3 SHOW STOPPERS Cedra Talaga L Mizuno Long Beach 14 Rockstar: Rockstar is fitting because Talaga is a defensive rockstar. She’s high-octane and plays with tons of passion and emotion. She also patrols the back row well picking up shots and keeping rallies going. Ryah Brock OH Forza1 North 14 One: Brock is a hold-it-down outside who has a bright future with her athletic ability. She can get up and unload with her strong arm. She’s the go-to who Forza relies on in the clutch. Chloe Taylor S/RS Forza1 North 14 One: Taylor – part of the Class of 2028 – was a key piece in Forza almost making the quarterfinals. She’s a two-way player who also adds a bit of height to the front row. She’s a capable scorer and does well putting her hitters in good spots. Sanai Severloh MB Forza1 North 14 One: Severloh is one to keep tabs on as she grows and develops. She does nice things on the attack and hits with strength. Mariah Akinsola MB TAV 14 Black: Akinsola was a force at the net! She blasted balls down at, inside or just outside the 10-feet line on the regular. It made her nearly impossible to defend and reason why TAV rolled into the quarterfinals. Gentry Barker OH TAV 14 Black: Barker was another piece of the attack who defenses struggled to contain. She’s a bit undersized but can bring the heat for sure. Berkley France OH AZ Sky 14G: AZ Sky did well getting into challenge play but fell to Tstreet to miss out on the gold bracket. France showed no fear on the outside. She’s a bit undersized as well but doesn’t back down and stays aggressive. Ryan Spencer OH Skyline 14 Royal: Spencer was getting up and ripping balls sideline to sideline. She’s a six-rotation mainstay and featured piece of the attack. Morgan Meiring OH Elevation 14 Molly: Meiring was launching winners all over. She has a strong arm and can pound balls when she really connects. Vanessa Glenn OH Madfrog 14 Green: Glenn is an athletic outside who has no issues getting in the air and unleashing on defenses. She’s a quick jumper on top of that, so she’s tough to time up. Mackenzie Ratcliff MB Madfrog 14 Green: Ratcliff was showcasing her athleticism as well. She too gets up and has no trouble on the attack with her lively arm and ability to hit with pace. Brooklyn Sippio MB GP 14 Rox: GP was on the cusp of the gold bracket as well but fell in challenge play. Sippio is a rising talent with her length and reach at the net. It allows her to impact both sides of the ball with her scoring and blocking.

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USAV 15 Open: Day 3 All Red Hat Team

That we limit our daily All Red Hat Team to 10 players is a blessing and a curse. We want to keep the selections exclusive, and thus keep the picks to just 10. But, on a day like Day 3 of 15 Open the USAV Girls Junior Nationals Championships, many, many more deserved to be featured because there were more than 10 players who were our favorite. Still, we needed to trim it to 10, which we did below with our Day 3 All Red Hat Team. The goal is to highlight a daily team consisting of two players from each position – outside, middle, right side, setter and libero who – were our absolute favorite players of the day. Favorite doesn’t mean only a 5-star recruit or a familiar name. These are players who stood out to us for a variety of reasons, from amazing play to great energy or attitude or making key hustle plays. These are daily all-stars who really stood out the most to us for one reason or another. DAY 3 ALL RED HAT TEAM Aubree Deshetsky OH Legacy 15-1 Adidas: It’s almost impossible to reach the gold bracket of a divison this deep and competitive without everyone contributing. Deshetsky was filling her role to a tee. She’s a bit undersized but isn’t afraid to go at bigger blockers. She was taking aggressive, smart swings and with it providing Legacy yet another scoring punch and keeping it moving along. MaryKate Scheumann OH Team Pineapple 15 Black: Scheumann is a perfect All Red Hat Team selection but she’s another outside who keeps coming at you and won’t back down for anything. She’s a bit undersized but carries a big arm and hits a heavy ball. She takes a lot of swings and helped Team Pineapple reach the challenge rounds before falling to Legacy in three. Jaycee Mack MB Wave 15 Brennan: We featured Mack as a Day 3 Show Stopper. She’s part of the Class of 2027 and with her growth and development from last season through this season has been remarkable. She always had big, powerful arm but she’s added an inch or two as well as more strength and is becoming a force at the net. She hits with tons of power and is a big reason why Wave is in the gold bracket. Hannah Lee MB Madfrog 15 Green: Madfrog battled but came up a victory short of reaching the gold bracket. Lee played her part well. She’s a competitive, no-nonsense middle who takes big, aggressive swings. She has a strong arm and is a key part of the Madfrog attack when in system. Willow Weninger RS Pohaku 15-1: Weninger was a part of the reason why Pohaku reached the gold bracket and remains in contention for a medal. She’s a key ingredient on the right side with her scoring and blocking ability. She has a lively arm and can really connect with it. She also was coming through with timely blocks in challenge play to help her team advance. Sophia Davis RS Elevation 15 Tony: Davis was strong on Day 3 with her efforts from the right side. She’s a six-rotation right side who swings front and back row. She’s a capable attacker, with a big arm who blasts balls from side to side. Elle Mottola S WPVC 15 Armour Black: Winter Park wasn’t able to advance from the second round of pool play but Mottola’s skills were on full display. She has great on-court presence and command of the offense. She connects well with all her hitters and does things others setters aren’t doing, like running the middle outside the 10-foot line. Lily Rolfes S Arizona Storm 15 Thunder: We love what we saw from Rolfes. She’s a fiery competitor who helped lift her team into medal contention by reaching the gold bracket. She does well mixing up her sets and can really fire her team up with a timely block. Gabi Rodriguez L Madfrog 15 Green: Rodriguez was flying around the back row making plays. She’s a high-energy libero who passes well out of serve receive and covers well with her speed. Mya Capistrano L Forza1 North 15 One: Forza North fought on Day 3 but couldn’t quite get into the gold bracket with a tight loss to Arizona Storm. Capistrano was amazing in her role. She stood in against big hitters and did well picking off shots and extending rallies. She’s also quick and moves around the court with ease.

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