Show Me Qualifier

Show Me: Day 2 Show Stoppers And More

After two days of action at the Show Me Qualifier in Kansas City, paths to the Open bids are clear. Let’s start with 17 Open, where eight teams – split between two pools – remain in the hunt for the gold medal. Half of those teams – Dynasty 17 Black, Drive Nation 17 Red, Premier Nebraska 17 Gold and OT 17 Felix – are already qualified. That means that between TAV 17 Black, KC Power 17 Black, Skyline 17 Royal and VCNebraska 17 Elite, three are going home with bids while one is simply going home. While we have seen more dramatic setups when it comes to chasing bids, here’s where it gets fun! Dynasty – ranked No. 2 in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50 National Rankings – No. 3 Drive Nation and No. 4 TAV are in Pool 1 together, along with OT 17 Felix. I really wish I could just sit at this court Day 3 and watch all the insane action that’s going to be taking place. TAV is in an interesting spot, not having a bid. It was actually OT Felix which kept TAV from a bid at Sunshine. That was TAV’s only loss in Florida and payback is sure to be on TAV’s mind. The path to a bid for TAV looks like this. As long as Premier Nebraska doesn’t finish in last place in Pool 2, TAV is guaranteed one match for a bid no matter what happens in pool play. If both Premier Nebraska and TAV finish third or better, TAV qualifies. Being in Pool 2 is not bad, as KC Power, Skyline and VCNebraska all have a great opportunity. It’s possible that no matter what happens in the pool, that one of them still gets to play for a bid. But, two of three are assured of qualifying, while it’s possible all three earn bids, however a long shot that might be. It’s crazy how the pools broke in 16 Open when it comes to Day 3 qualifying. One four-team pool features AJV 16 Adidas, Iowa PowerPlex 16 515, Northern Lights 16-1 and MAVS KC 16-1. None of them have bids and that’s certainly about to change, as two of the four should qualify. The other pools features already-qualified Nebraska One 16 Synergy, along with TAV 16 Black, Skyline 16 Royal and Six Pack 16. We know trickle down can’t go past fourth place, and that’s if Nebraska One finishes second or better. It’s pretty straight forward if that happens, as the the first or second-place team in Nebraska One’s pool along with the other top-two finishers in Pool 1 qualify. Where it gets wild is if Nebraska One doesn’t finish in the top four. In that scenario, the pool winners will qualify, with a third-place match for the final bid between the two second-place squads. MAVS KC had a big day, winning a must-win clash with Dynasty 16 Black. Both teams were 1-1 with the winner reaching the gold pools. MAVS is currently ranked No. 44, while Dynasty sits at No. 30. The only other team in 16 Open with a bid in Premier Nebraska 16 Gold finished in a three-way tie with Tulsa Power 16-1 and Six Pack 16 at 1-2. Premier Nebraska took third and is out of gold pools. Six Pack took second, while Tulsa Power took fourth a day after upsetting top seed Nebraska One. The format is different in 15 Open. Instead of two, four-team pools, there are two, three-team pools. What really matters though is that both Skyline 15 Royal and TAV 15 Black are both qualified and are in separate pools. Skyline is matched with MAVS 816 15-1 and Premier Nebraska 15 Gold. TAV is with Pohaku 15-1 and OP2 15-1. But, with just two bids available instead of three trickle down can extend to fourth place. No further. Skyline is the top team in the country, so there’s a good chance Skyline wins its pool. Same goes for TAV. In that situation, the second-place finishers would both qualify. Should neither TAV nor Skyline win their respective pools, then the two pool winners would both qualify. DAY 2 SHOW STOPPERS Malayah Long S VCNebraska 17 Elite: A 4-star Marquette recruit, Long helped VCNebraska remain in contention for an Open bid. She’s a smooth disher with a strong grip on the offense. She can set tempo and doesn’t miss her spots very often. Lolo Lambert OH Drive Nation 17 Red: Given the considerable talent in the 17 Open division, to say Lambert, to say Lambert had the biggest hammer of them all isn’t an understatement. The 4-star Arkansas high-flier was denting the floor at times. Ava Martin S Pohaku 17-1: Martin – a 3-star recruit – and her Pohaku teammates had a rough day and were eliminated from contention after going 0-3. Martin does well moving the ball around and getting all her hitters involved in the attack. Luca Bredenberg L/DS Northern Lights 17-1: A 3-star Lipscomb commit, Bredenberg and Northern Lights were also knocked out of bid contention after going 0-3. She’s often asked to pass half the court in serve receive and does a fine job defending the back row. Reese Ptacek MB Northern Lights 17-1: It was tough at times to get Ptacek involved with Northern Lights struggling to pass, but when she was able to get set she produced. The 3-star Kansas commit takes up a lot of space at the net and does well finding open space to exploit. McKenna Brand L/DS Skyline 17 Royal: Brand – a 3-star Connecticut commit – helped Skyline advance to the gold pools with her backrow effort Sunday. She was passing soundly in serve receive and keeping Skyline in system. Mia Tvrdy MB Premier Nebraska 17 Gold: Tvrdy and her Premier Nebraska teammates are already qualified and could play a factor in trickle down as they made the gold pools. Tvrdy was a problem in the middle for opposing defenses. She’s strong, gets off the

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Show Me: Day 1 Show Stoppers And More

Some Day 1s are fire. Other times they are the spark for the fire for Days 2 and 3. It was latter case on the opening day of the 2023 version of the Show Me Qualifier in Kansas City. It was an especially different beginning in 15 Open from other qualifiers because there were no teams eliminated on Day 1. There are three, six-team pools in 15 Open and so no teams were cut from bid contention Saturday. The top contenders in Skyline 15 Royal, Pohaku 15-1 and TAV 15 Black combined to go 9-0. It was the typical format in both 16 and 17 Open. The biggest news was top-seed Nebraska One 16 Synergy going down. Nebraska One is one of two teams in 16 Open with a bid, so there’s nothing to lose so-to-speak for Nebraska One. But Tulsa Power 16-1 pulling off the big upset of the No. 6 team in the nation definitely shakes up the seedings for Day 2. Tulsa Power takes over the top seed and is now in a pool with AJV 16 Adidas, Premier Nebraska 16 Gold and Six Pack 16. Premier Nebraska already owns a bid and we could’ve seen both previously-qualified teams in the same pool. Instead, Nebraska One is now the No. 4 team in Pool 2, along with Dynasty 16 Black, MAVS KC 16-1 and Adversity 16 Adidas. That’s a tough break for those teams, as Nebraska One should advance and take away a spot from one of three. Nebraska One wasn’t the only No. 1 team in its pool to fall in 16 Open. Skyline 16 Royal stumbled in its opener against PVA 16 Elite and finished in a three-way tie with PVA and VCNebraska 16 Elite at 2-1. Skyline still wound up first based on tiebreakers though, with PVA taking second place. It was a good day for Iowa Power Plex 16U, which went 2-1 as the No. 4 team in Pool 6. Iowa Power Plex defeated both KC Power 16-1 and Muscle VB 16-1 Black to advance along with 3-0 Northern Lights 16-1. There were minor upsets and movement in 17 Open. Both Six Pack 17 – in Pool 1 – and Shockwave 17 Black – in Pool 3 – were the only non-Nos. 1 and 2s to advance. They were both the No. 3 team in their respective pools and moved on. OT 17 Felix, VCNebraska 17 Elite and Pohaku 17-1 all lost as No. 1 teams in their respective pools. All three finished second and still advanced. DAY 1 SHOW STOPPERS Leah Robinson OH MAVS 816 15-1: Robinson helped her MAVS teammates to a 2-1 mark and are poised to advance from the six-team pool on Day 2. Robinson is a presence on the court with her size. She’s a great offensive option for MAVS and she’s utilized a bunch in the attack. Rayna Christianson S/RS Northern Lights 15-1: Christianson – a 5-star recruit – and Northern Lights have work to do to break pool after going 1-2 on Day 1. Christianson, with her size and length, is such a factor anywhere she’s on the court. She’s the team’s best scoring threat across the front row and a sound setter in the back. Anna O’Keefe S Northern Lights 15-1: O’Keefe can keep the offense churning when she checks in. She has good hands and touch. Romi Chlebecek OH Northern Lights 15-1: Chelbecek is a bit undersized on the left but she doesn’t back down. She stays aggressive and keeps on taking swings and pressuring the defense. Addison West OH Premier Nebraska 15 Gold: A 3-star recruit, West has tons of potential and will be someone to watch as she keeps adding strength and power. She’s the go-to on the left for this squad and she provides her share of offense. Paighton Erb MB Premier Nebraska 15 Gold: Erb is another member of the rooster who looks to have lots of upside too as she continues developing. She’s lanky with a quick arm swing and someone defenses need to be ready to get the ball. Malia Miller OH Integrity 15 Intense Blue: It was our second time seeing Miller this season. Her and her teammates went 2-1 on the opening day and remain alive to break pool on Day 2. She’s a six-rotation go-to hitter. She’s raw and still developing but she is solid across the back row and showed a nice arm. Carlyle Johnson MB Shockwave 15 Black: Johnson was a factor in the middle as Shockwave went 1-2. She has some height and she was swinging and scoring well. Taylor Stanley RS Dynasty 15 Black: Stanley made us take notice with her play at the night. She’s a tall right side with huge upside. She has a nice arm and was doing well touching balls at the net. Makenzie Walsh RS Kairos 15 Alpha: The lefty was a reliable scoring option as Kairos wrapped up the day 1-2 in Pool 3. She has good size and swings well, helping her team open up the attack when she was front row. Audrey Bassett OH NE Elite 15 Phoenix: Bassett was an outside who was bringing it on the attack. She’s a bit undersized but has a big arm and hits a heavy ball. She isn’t afraid of bigger blocks either and had NE Eilte in contention to upset TAV 15 Black before falling in three. Taya Thaden MB NE Elite 15 Phoenix: Thaden displayed her scoring ability. Though she didn’t get the ball a lot, the times she did she was effective. She has a quick swing and hits with pace. Sydney Light MB Iowa Power Plex 15 Black: At 2-1, Iowa Power Plex is looking well to break its pool and make the challenge rounds on Day 2. Light is active in the middle and will get set when in system. She hits out of the middle and runs slide. Taylor Clarke RS Skyline 15 Royal: Clarke – a 4-star recruit

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Show Me: Preview and Predictions (FREE)

It’s a busy, busy weekend with multiple qualifiers happening at literally almost every corner of the country. There’s bid competition in Spokane, St. Louis, Atlanta and Philly. And of course, Kansas City! The Show Me Qualifier is where I’ll be spending this weekend and providing coverage of the three-day event. Below, we take a look at the 15-17 Open divisions and take a guess as to what might happen. 17 OPEN Number of Teams: 30 Number of Bids Available: 3   Previously-Qualified Teams (5): Dynasty 17 Black; Drive Nation 17 Red; Premier Nebraska 17 Gold; OT 17 Felix; Rev 17-1 Raptors vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (14): 2. Dynasty 17 Black 3. Drive Nation 17 Red 4. TAV 17 Black 12. Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 13. Premier Nebraska 17 Gold 16. Pohaku 17-1 19. KC Power 17 Black 20. OT 17 Felix 30. Skyline 17 Royal 31. VCNebraska 17 Elite 42. Iowa Power Plex 17U 47. Rev 17-1 Raptors 48. Shockwave 17 Black 49. Northern Lights 17-1 5-Star Athletes to Know: Lauren Medeck OH Premier Nebraska 17 Gold (South Dakota) Faith Frame L/DS Premier Nebraska 17 Gold (Cincinnati) Skyler Pierce OH Dynasty 17 Black (Nebraska) Cy Rae Campbell MB Dynasty 17 Black (Wake Forest) Lauren Harden OH Rev 17-1 Raptors (Florida) Ayden Ames MB Drive Nation 17 Red (Nebraska) Favor Anyanwu MB TAV 17 Black (USC) Jadyn Livings OH TAV 17 Black (USC) Camille Edwards S TAV 17 Black (Michigan) Reese Messer S Dynasty 17 Black (2025) Abigail Mullen RS Dynasty 17 Black (2025) Gillian Pitts L/DS TAV 17 Black (2025) Cari Spears OH TAV 17 Black (2025) 4-Star Athletes to Know: Malayah Long S VCNebraska 17 Elite (Marquette) Paisley Douglas L/DS VCNebraska 17 Elite (USC) Fallon Stewart OH OT 17 Felix (Cincinnati) Mia Tvrdy MB Premier Nebraska 17 Gold (Oregon) Lolo Lambert OH Drive Nation 17 Red (Arkansas) Janelle Green S KC Power 17 Black (Cincinnati) Grace Carroll RS Drive Nation 17 Red (Baylor) Camdyn Stucky S Shockwave 17 Black (Tennessee) Gracie Morrow OH Shockwave 17 Black (Wichita State) Bethanie Wu S Drive Nation 17 Red (Yale) Carson Eickenloff S Drive Nation 17 Red (Ole Miss) Ryan McAleer L/DS Dynasty 17 Black (Purdue) Lauren Salata OH Adversity 17 Adidas Ava Pratt OH Adversity 17 Adidas (Northwestern) Mikala Young OH TAV 17 Black (TCU) Anna Boatner MB TAV 17 Black Jade Ingram MB Dynasty 17 Black (UNLV) Mak Miller MB Pohaku 17-1 (2025) Jordan Smith OH/RS Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite (2025) Maya Witherspoon OH Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite (2025) Outlook/Prediction: This division is not for the faint-hearted. It’s not quite as packed as the Big South 17 Open field, but it’s pretty close. The second, third and fourth-ranked teams in the nation from our Top 50 are here, as are eight from the Top 20. With five qualified teams, we know all three bids are going out. There’s sure to be trickle down, but could it go all the way to eighth-place? With this field, it’s definitely possible that all five qualified teams could finish in the top eight. But where do the bids go? TAV 17 Black is the front-runner. TAV lost once at Sunshine and finished in fifth to miss out on a bid. It would be a huge upset to see TAV not finish in a spot to qualify here. TAV is a gold-medal favorite, right with Dynasty 17 Black and Drive Nation 17 Red. Dynasty has two second-place showings at Northern Lights and MEQ and would love to actually add a gold at Show Me. Drive Nation took first at Red Rock and is looking to add another gold to its collection. Premier Nebraska 17 Gold, OT 17 Felix and Rev 17-1 Raptors are the other teams with bids and could factor into trickle down. Rev qualified at NEQ and will have to up its game to get into contention in KC. Premier Nebraska qualified back at Northern Lights and should finish in the top eight. As should OT Felix. It still leaves the bids. Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite, KC Power 17-1 and Pohaku 17-1 are all contenders along with TAV. Pohaku beat KC Power at MEQ in a must-win fifth-place bracket match but fell a victory short of a bid when it lost to Boiler Jrs 17 Gold and took sixth. Rockwood Thunder is looking to create some of its own luck. Rockwood Thunder finished fourth at Northern Lights, tied for fifth at NEQ and in a tough-break lost just once at MEQ – to Pohaku – and finished 13th. Ultimately, I like Drive Nation topping TAV in the final, while Dynasty beats Pohaku for third. Rockwood Thunder outlasts VCNebraska for fifth place, joining TAV and Pohaku in qualifying. *** 16 OPEN Number of Teams: 30 Number of Bids Available: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (2): Nebraska One 16 Synergy; Premier Nebraska 16 Gold vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (10): 6. Nebraska One 16 Synergy 9. TAV 16 Black 26. Northern Lights 16-1 27. Premier Nebraska 16 Gold 30. Dynasty 16 Black 31. Skyline 16 Royal 35. AJV 16 Adidas 38. Rockwood Thunder 16 Elite 41. NE Elite 16 Maverick 44. MAVS KC 16-1 5-Star Athletes to Know: Logan Parks S/RS MAVS 16-1 Natalie Wardlow MB Nebraska One 16 Synergy Ella Florez S/RS Dynasty 16 Black (2026) 4-Star Athletes to Know: Chichi Nnaji RS Skyline 16 Royal Taylor Cook S Skyline 16 Royal Bella Ocampo OH Skyline 16 Royal Mesaiya Bettis OH Northern Lights 16-1 Carly Gilk RS MN Select 16-1 Kennedi Rogers OH AVA TX 16 Adidas Ashlyn Paymal RS NE Elite 16 Maverick Sarah Pfiffner S TAV 16 Black Madison Winkler L/DS TAV 16 Black Audrey Jackson OH TAV 16 Black Lauryn Mack OH TAV 16 Black Sydnee Peterson RS TAV 16 Black Reese Jackson OH TAV 16 Black Leni Stanton-Parker OH Metro 16 Travel Elena Hoecke MB MN Select 16-1 (2026) Outlook/Prediction: I’m excited to see which teams punch their tickets in this division. With Nebraska One 16 Synergy qualifying at Northern Lights, that’s one big bid

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Show Me 17O: Nebraska Premier Perfect; Plus All The Qualifiers

As loaded as the 17 Open division is in 2022, predicting how any qualifier may play out is as difficult as it’s ever been. The only thing that was known for sure was that the three available Open bids were sure to go out at Show Me but it was anyone’s guess how it would all play out. If anyone had Premier Nebraska 17 Gold running the table and producing a perfect weekend at 10-0 in matches and 20-0 in sets then congratulations on that pick. Of course, Premier Nebraska secured its bid way back in January at the Northern Lights Qualifier so there were still the qualifying spots to fill out. Those went to second-place MN Select 17-1, third-place Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite – who tied with MAVS KC 17-1 – and fifth-place Mintonettte Sports m.71, who didn’t benefit from trickle down and needed to defeat Iowa Rockets 17 in bracket play to secure its bid. Below, we tell the tales of how those teams’ weekend played out. PREMIER NEBRASKA 17 GOLD (FIRST, 10-0) Day 1: d IPVA 17 Black 25-13; 25-14; d TIV 17 Asics Black 25-15, 25-7; d NKYVC 17 Tsunami 25-17, 25-13 Day 2: d Illini Elite 17 Cardinal 25-20, 25-17; d NE Elite 17 Vici 25-19, 25-15; d MAVS KC 17-1 25-20, 25-23 Day 3: d Iowa Rockets 17 25-21, 25-12; Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 25-19, 25-22; NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami 25-19, 25-20; d MN Select 17-1 25-15, 27-25   The Northern Lights 18s Qualifier had a bit of twist this season by adding 17 Open and offering three bids back in January. Premier Nebraska joined 1st Alliance 17 Gold and MAVS KC in taking advantage and qualifying early. For Premier Nebraska, the only national tournament in between that one and this past weekend at Show Me was Triple Crown in February. If rust was of any concern, Premier Nebraska didn’t show any and instead played like a team eager to get back to competition and stake its claim as one of the title contenders come Nationals. “The biggest thing this weekend was already having the bid sometimes teams start looking at the finish line instead of continuing getting better,” Nebraska Premier coach Joe Wessel said. “We already had the bid but we didn’t want to take that for granted. We needed to prove why we earned the bid and show we can be one of the best teams in the nation.” The fact that Premier Nebraska was moving through the weekend without losing a set was on their minds but it remained unspoken about until sweeping MN Select in the final and completing the perfect weekend. The run also included beating NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami twice, plus MAVS KC and Rockwood Thunder. “They kept it quiet until we beat MN Select,” Wessel said. “Then it was the first thing they said was that they didn’t lose a set all weekend. We went 20-0 but no one made a big deal of it until it was over.” There’s a lot to like about Premier’s lineup, starting with vballrecruiter.com five-star recruit and right side Grace Heaney. She’s just one of many options Premier throws at opponents, with four-star recruits Destiny Ndam-Simpson and Alanna Bankston being two more. Then there’s middles Kailey Hrbek and Brooklyn Fuchs and outside Stella Adeyemi for setters Ivy Leuck and Reese Booth to utilize as well. Olivia Mauch – a five-star Class of 2024 recruit – and Makenzie Dyrstad can take turns trading off between libero and DS. “We can make changes to our lineup,” Wessel said. “We have an athletic, versatile team. Some matches we can play girls on the right side. Other matches we can play them on the left side. We have two really good defensive players that we switch up at times too. We don’t really have a set lineup. We do run a true 6-2 so all 10 girls can showcase their talents.” *** MN SELECT 17-1 (SECOND, 8-1) Day 1: d Co Jrs 17 Kevin 25-10, 25-22, 25-17; d HPSTL 17 Royal 27-25, 25-22, 25-23 Day 2: d Madfrog 17 Black 25-21, 25-14; d Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 25-16, 25-23; d KC Power 17-1 19-25, 25-23, 18-16 Day 3: d Dynasty 17 Black 21-25, 25-16, 15-11; d MAVS KC 17-1 18-25, 25-21, 15-6; d Mintonette Sports m.71 25-20, 30-28; l Premier Nebraska 17 Gold 25-15, 27-25   Last month at MEQ, MN Select needed to win its gold pool – one that included Circle City 17 Purple – to have a shot at qualifying. At Show Me, it wasn’t so cutthroat for MN Select, which merely needed to finish in the top three in its gold pool to stay in the hunt for a bid. MN Select ended up taking matters into its own hands, downing Dynasty 17 Black, MAVS KC and Mintonette before falling to Premier Nebraska in the final to qualify without any trickle down. “We cut down on our errors,” MN Select coach George Padjen said. “We have some physical hitters and we can be really good offensively. We have a great setter but if we can’t pass we can’t get good swings. We were passing better and Stella (Swenson) was making good decisions getting everyone looks.” MN Select redesigned its roster that finished 13th in 16 Open last summer. Among those back are outsides Avery Bolles and Marlie Hanson. Plus middle Kate Simington and libero Kate Thibault – both three-star recruits. That left room for many newcomers, including the five-star recruit Swenson and her sister and outside hitter Olivia Swenson – a three-star recruit. Another key addition was 6-4 right side and four-star recruit Sydney Schnichels. Joining the trio was also L/DS Sophia Johnson and middles Annika Veurink and Kaia Caffee, a sophomore like the Swenson sisters and another five-star recruit. The focus moving forward for the group is continuing tightening up its play and taking some of the close sets that have gone against them. In the team’s last four qualifier losses

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Show Me 15O: Nebraska One Takes Gold; 3 Bids Awarded

Going into 15 Open at the Show Me Qualifier in Kansas City all three bids had to be awarded out as trickle down could only extend to sixth place and no further. It was just a matter of how previously-qualified teams in Dynasty 15 Black, Nebraska One 15 Synergy and Circle City 15 Purple would factor into the mix. The answer was heavily. Nebraska One wound up defeating Dynasty in the final in straight sets, while Circle City tied for third place with NE Elite 15 Matrix. That gave NE Elite the first bid. The last two went to fifth-place finishers in Northern Lights 15-1 and HPSTL 15 Royal. Here’s a rundown of the teams’ path to their finishes. NEBRASKA ONE 15 SYNERGY (FIRST, 8-2) Day 1: l MAVS 816 15-1 25-19, 15-25, 15-10; d FRVBC 15 Black 25-16, 25-14; d ECJ 15-1 25-12, 25-20 Day 2: l MAVS KC 15-1 25-20, 25-20; d Skyline 15 Royal 25-18, 25-22; d OP2 15-1 25-14, 25-18 Day 3: d HPSTL 15 Royal 19-25, 29-27, 15-8; d Mich Elite 15 Mizuno 25-21, 25-22; d NE Elite 15 Matrix 25-13, 25-21; d Dynasty 15 Black 25-16, 25-15   As long as Nebraska One wasn’t playing a MAVS team, it proved untouchable on its way to winning the 15 Open division. Having clinched an Open bid previously at Northern Lights, there was no pressure on Nebraska One in terms of finishing in a spot to qualify. However, long before Nebraska One was in a position to finish on top of the field, it was simply looking to survive Day 1 after losing its opening match of the weekend to MAVS 816 15-1. It wasn’t reason to panic necessarily but another loss in pool play would knock out Nebraska One much earlier than anyone expected. That was never in danger of happening with the way Nebraska One responded, sweeping FRVBC 15-1 Black and ECJ 15-1 to take second. The loss did put Nebraska One in a much tougher Day 2 pool and again the Great Plains Region club received an early-morning wakeup call with a setback to MAVS KC 15-1 in straight sets in its first match. With Skyline 15 Royal up next, there was no guarantee Nebraska One would advance. But once again, Nebraska One found its form and swept past Skyline and OP2 15-1 to move into gold pools. Once there, there was no stopping Nebraska One on Day 3. Nebraska One fought past HPSTL, Mich Elite 15 Mizuno and NE Elite to make the final, where Nebraska One swept Dynasty, 25-16, 25-15, to claim the championship. Nebraska One was in position to make the final at Northern Lights but fell to Drive Nation 15 Red in its final gold pool match. That left Nebraska One in a showdown with Northern Lights for the final bid. Nebraska One took that contest in straight sets, 25-10, 25-22, to secure its bid. Outside of 6-4 middle blocker and vballrecruiter.com four-star recruit Natalie Wardlow, Nebraska One doesn’t have the size of some other teams in the division. It also relies on seventh-grade setter Malorie Boesiger to run the show and she definitely plays with a maturity beyond her age. Outside hitters Mattie Kamery and three-star recruit Anna Jelinek are both steady with a knack for scoring against bigger blocks. Kacey Porter helps balance the offense with her attacking on the right side, while Nebraska One relies on Kendall Cose in the other middle position. Also, Keri Leimbach showed herself to be one of the more impressive liberos in the division flying around the court making plays. *** DYNASTY 15 BLACK (SECOND, 8-2) Day 1: d Synergy 15-1 25-23, 25-18; d Nebraska Jrs 15 Black 25-12, 25-16; d Rockwood Thunder 15 Elite 25-19, 25-16 Day 2: NE Elite 15 Matrix 25-22, 25-19; d Premier Nebraska 15 Gold 25-16, 23-25, 15-10; d MKE Sting 15 Gold 26-24, 25-19 Day 3: d Northern Lights 15-1 25-17, 25-10; d Circle City 15 Purple 11-25, 25-22, 15-13; l MAVS 15 KC 15-1 25-23, 25-23; l Nebraska One 15 Synergy 25-16, 25-15 We were on hand at MEQ in Indy when Dynasty captured first place and clinched its 15 Open bid. There, Dynasty reeled off victories in its last five outings and kept it going in KC, where it took its first eight matches before dropping its final two, including in the final to Nebraska One. Dynasty also lost to MAVS KC in gold pool play but had already clinched first place and its spot in the final. It was Dynasty’s defense and ability to extend rallies and take advantage that led to its success in Indy and the Heart of America Region club continued on with that style of play in KC. Dynasty is not an overly big team but has one of the most reliable outsides in the division in three-star recruit Lauren Lopez. The attack was helped out by Jenna McClure, who showed some strong play at outside as well. Setters Ella Florez and Emma Christian also had middles Epifania Salamasina and Isabel Glover to work with, as well as right sides Leah Russell-Bova and Ashlee Chavez. Hadley Porter was her usually steady self at libero to anchor the defense and set the tone. Up next for Dynasty is Windy City, where it opens as the No. 1 seed and will look to triple qualify. *** CIRCLE CITY 15 PURPLE (T-THIRD, 7-2) Day 1: d Premier Nebraska 15 Gold 25-11, 18-25, 15-13; d Team Momentum 15 Navy 25-8, 25-17; d OT 15 Meg 25-19, 25-20 Day 2: l HPSTL 15 Royal 25-19, 16-25, 15-7; d Rockwood Thunder 15 Elite 19-25, 25-15, 15-11; d Tulsa Power 15-1 26-24, 29-27 Day 3: d MAVS KC 15-1 25-20, 20-25, 15-11; l Dynasty 15 Black 11-25, 25-22, 15-13; d Northern Lights 15-1 25-16, 25-22 After defeating Legacy 15-1 Adidas in the third-place match at MEQ, Circle City arrived knowing there would be no such dramatics in terms of bidding at Show Me. That’s

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Show Me 16O: Circle City Champs; NKYVC, OT Join In Qualifying

Dynasty 16 Black was untouchable in its first two qualifiers of the season – winning both Northern Lights and MEQ. The Heart of America Region club was continuing its dominance into Day 3 at Show Me until NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami finally found a way to solve it in their gold pool meeting. The huge victory not only eventually gave NKYVC a bid, it helped propel the squad into the final. There, however, NKYVC ran into a red-hot Circle City 16 Purple group that wasn’t going to be denied as the Hoosier Region club finished off its undefeated run to the 16 Open championship and earned its bid as well. With Dynasty, KC Power 16-1 and Premier Nebraska 16 Gold already having bids and finishing in the top six, it created trickle down with OT 16 Roberto taking advantage and earning the final qualifying spot on the weekend. Here’s a look at these teams’ weekends in Kansas City. CIRLCE CITY 16 PURPLE (FIRST, 10-0) Day 1: d USA South 16 Premier 25-18, 15-25, 15-10; d MKE Sting 16 Gold 20-25, 30-28, 15-6; d HPSTL 15 Royal 25-15, 25-18 Day 2: d Nebraska Jrs 16 Black 25-22, 25-13; d Pohaku 16 25-17, 25-17; d NKYVC 16 Tsunami 25-18, 21-25, 15-12 Day 3: d Premier Nebraska 16 Gold 25-22, 18-25, 15-9; d HPSTL 16 Royal 25-16, 25-20; d KC Power 16-1 21-25, 25-22, 15-13; d NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami 25-22, 22-25, 17-15   At MEQ, Circle City put itself in a position to get a bid in its hometown but went 0-2 in gold pools with straight set losses to 1st Alliance 16 Gold and NKYVC. It was part of a rough finish in Indy, where after winning its first five outings Circle City dropped three in a row. With the grit and determination Circle City played with at Show Me, it was bound not to let that happen again. The path to the bid was not without its challenges as Circle City needed to pull out three-set victories six times, including in four of its final five matches. Two of those types of victories came against NKYVC – once on Day 2 and then again in an exciting conclusion in the championship match as Circle City won 17-15 in Game 3. Circle City also picked up impressive victories over previously-qualified Premier Nebraska and KC Power – both in three as well. The weekend kicked off in that fashion too, with Circle City going three in victories over USA South 16 Premier and MKE Sting 16 Gold on Day 1. Circle City went with the same lineup at MEQ and Show Me. Five-star recruit Ava Utterback was a featured part of the attack with her explosiveness on the outside. Sophia Mayo also had a strong effort at the other outside position, as did right side and three-star recruit Alexis Maesch. Setter and three-star recruit Emery Moore was also finding Caroline Frost, Scarlett Kimbrell and Dakota Elliott in the middle. Kimbrell and Elliott are three-star recruits, along with libero Alleigh Dutton. Dutton was part of a steady back row that also featured defensive specialists Rachel Vorst and Chloe Gilley. *** NKYVC 16-1 TSUNAMI (SECOND, 8-2) Day 1: d KC Power 16 Red 25-21, 25-13; d IPVA 16 Black 25-12, 25-4; d OP2 16-1 25-17, 25-15 Day 2: d Pohaku 16-1 25-21, 25-21; d Nebraska Jrs 16 Black 25-5, 25-12; l Circle City 16 Purple 25-18, 21-25, 15-12 Day 3: d Six Pack 16 25-17, 22-25, 15-9; d Dynasty 16 Black 25-19, 15-25, 15-11; d OT 16 Roberto 25-11, 26-28, 16-14; l Circle City 16 Purple 25-22, 22-25, 17-15   Few teams were as eager to get another crack at qualifying as NKYVC was. Its only setback at MEQ – a 15-13 loss in Game 3 to 1st Alliance – cost NKYVC its bid in Indy. Even then it wasn’t like NKYVC put it on its opponents en route to qualifying at Show Me. There was a definite grind to its second-place showing as NKYVC went three sets in its final five contests, including losses to Circle City on Day 2 and again in the final. However, NKYVC picked up arguably the most impressive victory of the season so far when it handed Dynasty its first loss in qualifying play. But given the wackiness of qualifiers the triumph over Dynasty still left NKYVC needing to beat OT or else NKYVC could finish third in the pool. Either way, NKYVC was still looking at a bid but no doubt deserved better after upsetting Dynasty. NKYVC pulled it out against OT in three – 16-14 in Game 3 – to finish its gold pool on top and reach the final. “I think it was exciting,” NKYVC coach Tyler Collins said. “It was a fun weekend going 8-2 and beating the No. 1 team in the country. We just missed the mark at MEQ. We were just a hair shy and we went back to practice working on different things.” Dynasty had NKYVC’s number at Triple Crown and NKYVC was determined to put up a better showing this time around. One key focus was trying to attack Dynasty from the service line and it worked. “We really served them hard,” Collins said. “We have a lot of respect for Skyler (Pierce) and their right side Abigail (Mullen). They have another really good outside too (Carlie Cisneros). We wanted to go really aggressive on serves against them. It helped tremendously. It limited their middle exposure and that allowed our middles to cheat and put up a better block.” Collins said he could talk about each individual in detail. The weekend was that good. Yet, he did want to make sure setter Abby Yoder – a three-star recruit – received just due. “I think people look past her but she did a phenomenal job,” he said. “She’s IQ heavy and was able to make the different sets that needed to be made. She finds our middles often and that relates

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Show Me: Top Outsides

The Show Me Qualifier proved to be one of the best ones we’ve been at yet. vballrecruiter.com spent time throughout the three days watching and observing as many teams and players as we possibly could. Below are the outside hitters who caught our attention the most. 15 OPEN Ava Ball, Northern Lights 15-1 – This 5-11 outside is also listed as a libero on Lights’ roster because she can pass well and strong ball skills. She’s a three-star recruit with a nice swing and hits with good pace. Lauren Lopez, Dynasty 15 Black – Lopes is a 5-10 three-star recruit. She jumps well and can really light it up when she gets a hold of one! Ava Tilden, NKYVC 15-1 Tsunami – Tilden seems to have a tall ceiling as she continues to improve. She’s 6-0 with a fluid swing and is a good option on the left for NKYVC. Shay Heaney, Premier Nebraska 15 Gold – There’s tons of upside to Heaney’s game. She’s currently a three-star recruit but this 6-1 outside could move up as she develops. She’s lengthy with a smooth swing and can hammer the ball. Logan Bell, Circle City 15 Purple – A 5-11 three-star recruit, Bell has a whip for an arm. She’s an aggressive hitter who uses the block well. Madison Hooper, Ozark Jrs 15 Elite – Don’t give Hooper an open look because she can rip it! She can score in a variety of ways. This 6-1 outside has plenty of upside! Hannah Leftridge, HPSTL 15 Royal – We saw Leftridge at MEQ earlier this season and this 5-9 outside knows how to compete. She hits all around and has great ball control and defense. Hannah Taylor, HPSTL 15 Royal – HPSTL was down a starting outside from MEQ but qualified anyway at Show Me in part because of Taylor’s contributions. She was solid on the outside and proved to be a reliable scorer who was taking aggressive swings and challenging the block. Kierstin Bevelle, OT 15 Meg – Bevelle was showing good passing skills out of serve receive. She also has an easy swing when she was attacking. Kelsie Thompson, ECJ 15-1 – Thompson is a 5-11 wirey outside and currently a three-star recruit. She’s a strong six rotation player who is capable of delivering some big kills. 16 OPEN Aowyn Schrader, Premier Nebraska 16 Gold – A 6-1 three-star recruit, Schrader can play on the left or in the middle. She’s a physical player who can pound the ball down. Ava Utterback, Circle City 16 Purple – Few in the gym impress in the ways Utterback does. It’s clear to see why this 6-0 outside is a five-star recruit. She touches 10-0 and is absolutely explosive on the attack. Sophia Mayo, Circle City 16 Purple – Filling out the outside spots for Circle City is Mayo. She’s 6-2 with a strong arm and gives Circle City another solid option on the left. Reis Baune, Northern Lights 16-1 – This 6-0 outside was passing well out of serve receive nad keeping Northern Lights in system. She also has a quick arm and can generate pace on her shots. Tia Traudt, VCNebraska 16 Elite – VCNebraska has a good one in Traudt. She’s 6-0 and playing up an age group. She has a nice swing and really gets after it attacking the block and hitting with pace. Fallon Stewart, OT 16 Roberto – Stewart is part of a strong outside duo for OT. She’s long at 6-2 and she doesn’t back down. Her future is bright! Amina N’diaye, OT 16 Roberto – The sky is the limit for N’diaye! She’s a freshman playing up and is a four-star recruit. At 6-1, she gets up very well and can take over in stretches. Ava Spachek, Pohaku 16-1 – Pohaku can cause problems for anyone. Part of that is the play of this 5-10 outside. Spachek isn’t as big and physical as some other outsides but she makes up for it with hard, aggressive swings that pressures the defense. Payton Petersen, Six Pack 16 – Petersen plays a big role as a six-rotation outside for Six Pack. She’s 6-0 and the go-to hitter who Six Pack turns to when it really needs a point. She has a great arm and hits with authority. Alivia Skidmore, NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami – Skidmore was playing at an MVP level on Day 3 in helping NKYVC reach the final and earn its bid. She’s 5-10 and touches 9-10 and was causing Dynasty 16 Black all sorts of trouble in their gold pool meeting. Skyler Pierce, Dynasty 16 Black – Pierce is no doubt a next-level talent. At 6-2 and already touching 10-3, she’s a five-star recruit with a limitless future. She’s an electric scorer with delivers some eye-popping kills. Carlie Cisneros, Dynasty 16 Black – It’s hard to find a better outside duo in this age group than Dynasty has with Pierce and Cisenros, who is a four-star recruit. She’s 6-0 and almost touches 10-0. She’s solid in the back row and is a smart attacker who is tough to slow down. 17 OPEN Ava Hoying, Mintonette Sports. m71 – A three-star recruit, Hoying is a steadying six-rotation player who does just about everything for Mintonette. She’s 6-0 and is very strong and powerful when she goes on the attack.   Reagan Fox, KC Power 17-1 – A 6-2 outside committed to Rutgers, Fox is a three-star recruit. She provides KC Power with steady and consistent scoring on the left with her smooth swing. Samantha Laird, NE Elite 17 Vici – Committed to South Dakota, Laird is 6-0 and plays an important role in the NE Elite attack. She has a fluid swing and is a smart attacker. Caitlyn Little, Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite – Little helped Rockwood Thunder to a bid with her strong play. She’s a 5-10 three-star recruit who jumps well and hits with power. Ava Siefke, NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami – This 6-1 outside

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Show Me: Top Right Sides

The Show Me Qualifier proved to be one of the best ones we’ve been at yet. vballrecruiter.com spent time throughout the three days watching and observing as many teams and players as we possibly could. Below are the right sides who caught our attention the most. 15 OPEN Mesaiya Bettis, Northern Lights 15-1 – Bettis is still raw and that’s scary! This 6-0 four-star recruit touches 10-1 and has incredible upside. Add she grows and adds some muscle she’s going to be a very difficult cover on the right side. Carly Gilk, Synergy 15-1 – College coaches are already talking about Gilk! She’s a 6-2 four-star recruit who already has physicality to her game. She plays all the way around and is even part of serve receive for Synergy. Gabby Orlet, HPSTL 15 Royal – It was a great weekend for HPSTL, which earned its Open bid despite having some key injuries. Helping make up the slack was this 5-10 lefty. She hits a heavy ball and allowed HPSTL to balance out its attack. Ava Wilson, Tulsa Power 15-1 – We didn’t see a whole lot of Wilson and her smooth swing. But what we did see it looks like this lefty has potential to make noise in the future! Ashlyn Paymal, NE Elite 15 Matrix – This 6-3 three-star recruit certainly impressed! She was unstoppable at times and a key part of the NE Elite attack. They line her up all across the front row, allowing her to hit from the left, middle and right side and she has all the shots. 16 OPEN Alexis Maesch, Circle City 16 Purple – A 5-11 lefty, Maesch can get after it at times and smack down some impressive winners. She’s a three-star recruit. Kananihokuao “Nele” Misipeka, Pohaku 16-1 – Misipeka is incredibly fun to watch! This three-star recruit makes things look easy on the court. She’s really physical and though she’s undersized is a strong blocker with great timing. Jillian Huckabey, KC Power 16-1 – Huckabey impresses with her pure arm swing and ability to launch balls. She’s a 5-11 three-star recruit with potential to move up the rankings. Abigail Mullen, Dynasty 16 Black – Mullen is special! It’s that simple with her. She has an unassuming way about her. That’s okay because her game does all the talking. She’s a 6-3 five-star recruit playing up an age group. She has a heavy arm and pounds balls. She’s also a menacing blocker on the right. 17 OPEN Lauryn Bowie, Mintonette Sports m.71 – A three-star recruit headed to Virginia, Bowie is 6-2 and touches 9-11. She’s as physical as they come on the right side. She’s capable of coming up with some resounding stuff blocks that are something to see! Elizabeth Goodenow, MAVS KC 17-1 – We’ve written about Goodenow – a three-star recruit – before. She’s committed to Yale and has the potential to do special things in the Ivy League. She’s a 6-0 lefty with a powerful arm and ability to take over matches at times. Gabriella Placide, Co Jrs 17 Kevin – Placide is 6-2, touches 10-5 and is committed to Northern Colorado. She can liven up the Co Jrs attack in a hurry. She delivers some eye-opening kills at times! Claire Morrissey, Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite – This 5-11 right side is playing up a year and has potential to make waves as she continues on. She plays all the way around, hits a pretty heavy ball and is active in the back row. Avery Van Hook, S/RS, Iowa Rockets 17 – A 5-11 lefty, Van Hook is fun to watch as she plays with lots of energy and passion. She’s strong as both a setter and a hitter and Iowa Rockets wouldn’t be the same without her. She’s committed to South Dakota. Sydney Schnichels, MN Select 17-1 – Schnichels – a 6-4 four-star recruit committed to Minnesota – shined throughout the weekend. She’s plays all the way around and even passes in serve receive. She has an easy swing that generates plenty of pace and with her length can go over blocks effortlessly. Grace Heaney, Premier Nebraska 17 Gold – Heaney is 6-2 but seems to play even longer than that! She’s a five-star recruit committed to Purdue who touches 10-2. She rips from the right side with a fluid swing.

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Show Me: Top Middle Blockers

The Show Me Qualifier proved to be one of the best ones we’ve been at yet. vballrecruiter.com spent time throughout the three days watching and observing as many teams and players as we possibly could. Below are the middles who caught our attention the most. 15 OPEN Natalie Wardlow, Nebraska One 15 Synergy – What tremendous potential this 6-4 middle carries in her future! She’s a four-star recruit and helped lift Nebraska One to the 15 Open crown. With her height she can hit over the block and score with ease. Keira Schmidt, Northern Lights 15-1 – This lanky middle is 6-5 with lots of upside to her game. She can hit straight down and makes it tough on defenders to pick up her tough angles. Reanna Lee, Boiler Jrs 15 Gold – A 5-10 middle, Lee is a three-star recruit. Though she’s not as tall as some other middles she faces, she is an efficient scorer with a nice swing to her. Epifania Salamasina, Dynasty 15 Black – This 5-10 middle has some physicality to her. She gets up pretty well and is capable of bashing one down when the option is there. Reese Dunkle, Circle City 15 Purple – At 6-2, Dunkle is a three-star recruit. She moves well and has a very fluid swing. She’s one to keep tabs on! Ellen Zapp, Circle City 15 Purple – Zapp was playing well in KC. She’s 6-0 and can fill different spots for Circle City, including on the right or in the middle. She has a quick swing and isn’t afraid to go for it. Tara Greenberry, HPSTL 15 Royal – This 6-2 middle can really drop the hammer when she gets a hold of one! She’s a physical presence in the middle who should continue to develop and grow. Faith Venable, VCNebraska 15 Elite – Venable runs the slide smoothly. She has a nice swing and hits well on the move. 16 OPEN Mia Tvrdy, Premier Nebraska 16 Gold – A 6-0 three-star recruit, Tvrdy has flashes of dominance! She’s athletic and jumps well. She can really get on top of the ball and crush it down with her strong arm. Melae Lacy, Iowa Rockets 16 – This 5-10 middle could be a bit of a sleeper and a great get for someone down the road! She plays basketball as well and you can see it in the way she jumps and gets after it on the attack. Reese Ptacek, Northern Lights 16-1 – Keep an eye on Ptacek! She’s 6-3 and touches 10-0. She runs a great slide. Alexis Alexander, Pohaku 16-1 – This 6-1 middle is a three-star recruit. She gets off the ground well and is a physical hitter who Pohaku likes to run on the slide too. Julia Hunt, NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami – Hunt is definitely one to know about! She’s a four-star recruit with plenty of upside. She’s 6-2 and touches 10-2 with a powerful arm. 17 OPEN Eloise Brandewie, Mintonette Sports m.71 – Brandewie plays with a looseness about her but that’s not to be mistaken for the impact she makes. She’s the real deal! She’s a 6-3 five-star recruit committed to Ohio State and touches 10-2. She’s an effective scorer as Mintonette looks to go to her as much as possible. And she also makes her presence felt defensively with her blocking. Calissa Minatee, Dynasty 17 Black – This 6-0 middle was awarded a golden ticket at the Under Armour Next Camp Series ahead of Show Me and will be part of the UA All-America game. She’s a five-star recruit committed to Minnesota and she is lighting quick with a dynamic jump who can impact the game with her attacking and blocking. Jaya Johnson, PVA 17 Elite – PVA doesn’t have a lot of size outside of this 6-2 middle. It’s crucial they get her involved in the attack but it changes the dynamic of the offense. She’s committed to Creighton. Kaitlyn Sellner, Northern Lights 17-1 – Sellner is one to follow. She remains uncommitted but is going to help some program immensely. She’s a handful in the middle. She moves well, is 6-1 and touches 10-2.

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Show Me: Top Setters

The Show Me Qualifier proved to be one of the best ones we’ve been at yet. vballrecruiter.com spent time throughout the three days watching and observing as many teams and players as we possibly could. Below are the setters who caught our attention the most. 15 OPEN Logan Parks, S/RS, MAVS KC 15-1 – Few players light up a gym like Parks! This five-star recruit is electric and plays a dual role for MAVS setting and hitting. She’s a physically strong setter capable of making some sets others can’t at her age. She’s also springy and gets off the ground well on her attack and can really rip it. Ella Florez, Dynasty 15 Black – An eighth-grader playing up, Florez is a smooth operator helping run a 6-2. She has an easy delivery with pin point accuracy and can really fling it behind her to catch defenses off balanced. Isabelle Brown, Circle City 15 Purple – This three-star recruit does a good job running the offense. There’s really not any flash to her game, she just gets the job done keeping the defense honest with her ability to mix it up and get her hitters good matchups. Peyton Meyer, NE Elite 15 Matrix – Meyer is also a three-star recruit and she’s similar to Meyer in she just knows how to run the offense. There’s not a lot of flash – which trust us isn’t a bad thing! – she’s just solid and steady and calming presence at the position. Ella Keeven, HPSTL 15 Royal – There’s an effortlessness about the way Keeven sets. She’s smooth with nice hands and puts the ball in a nice window for her hitters. 16 OPEN Reagan Hickey, Premier Nebraska 16 Gold – Hickey does well getting all her hitters involved with the offense is in system. She has good touch on the back set and going against the flow so defenses can’t totally lock in on one hitter. Emery Moore, Circle City 16 Purple – This three-star recruit is a competitor! She has a look in her eyes that she’s not backing down. She delivers a consistent ball too and makes some strong defensive reads as well. Janelle Green, KC Power 16-1 – This three-star recruit belongs on the all-attitude team. She’s always smiling and is cheery with her teammates. Oh yeah, and she also sets and directs an offense well! Reese Messer, Dynasty 16 Black – A freshman playing up, Messer is a rare five-star recruit. She’s quick and can get under balls others might not be able to. She can jump set and brings some athleticism and flair to the position. 17 OPEN Logan Jones, MAVS KC 17-1 – Jones is undersized but she’s a gamer and hustler! She’s quick and can really flick the ball around the court. Ella Swindle, KC Power 17-1 – There’s so much to love about this five-star recruit heading to Texas. She was invited to the Under Armour All-America game after receiving a golden ticket at the UA Next Camp series the day before the tourney started. At 6-2, she’s long, smooth and has great hands! Annika Sokol, S/RS, Co Jrs 17 Kevin – Sokol is a two-player for Co Jrs, hitting and setting. She’s a bit undersized at 5-10 when she’s in the front row hitting, but she’s heady and knows how to score. Ashley Mullen, Dynasty 17 Black – Some consider this five-star recruit committed to UCLA to be the best in the class. She’s silky smooth, can run tempo and rarely misses her spots. She’s a next-level talent for sure! Brynne McGhie, Dynasty 17 Black – McGhie is part of a 6-2 with Mullen. One of McGhie’s strength is her ability to mix up her sets and moves the ball around to keep defenses guessing. Juliette Myrick, Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite – This 6-0 setter is a four-star recruit committed to Army. She’s a gamer with a strong competitive drive and connects well with her hitters. Ava Blascziek, Northern Lights 17-1 – The 5-10 Blascziek looks like she’s having fun when she plays! She’s a three-star recruit who does a good job of getting her hitters involved with her distribution. Stella Swenson, MN Select 17-1 – It’s not surprising that this 6-1 setter is a five-star recruit. She has a high IQ and great touch. And there’s not a set she can’t make!

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Show Me: Day 2 Show Stoppers And More

After two days of action at the Show Me Qualifier in Kansas City, paths to the Open bids are clear. Let’s start with 17 Open, where eight teams – split between two pools – remain in the hunt for the gold medal. Half of those teams – Dynasty 17 Black, Drive Nation 17 Red, Premier Nebraska 17 Gold and OT 17 Felix – are already qualified. That means that between TAV 17 Black, KC Power 17 Black, Skyline 17 Royal and VCNebraska 17 Elite, three are going home with bids while one is simply going home. While we have seen more dramatic setups when it comes to chasing bids, here’s where it gets fun! Dynasty – ranked No. 2 in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50 National Rankings – No. 3 Drive Nation and No. 4 TAV are in Pool 1 together, along with OT 17 Felix. I really wish I could just sit at this court Day 3 and watch all the insane action that’s going to be taking place. TAV is in an interesting spot, not having a bid. It was actually OT Felix which kept TAV from a bid at Sunshine. That was TAV’s only loss in Florida and payback is sure to be on TAV’s mind. The path to a bid for TAV looks like this. As long as Premier Nebraska doesn’t finish in last place in Pool 2, TAV is guaranteed one match for a bid no matter what happens in pool play. If both Premier Nebraska and TAV finish third or better, TAV qualifies. Being in Pool 2 is not bad, as KC Power, Skyline and VCNebraska all have a great opportunity. It’s possible that no matter what happens in the pool, that one of them still gets to play for a bid. But, two of three are assured of qualifying, while it’s possible all three earn bids, however a long shot that might be. It’s crazy how the pools broke in 16 Open when it comes to Day 3 qualifying. One four-team pool features AJV 16 Adidas, Iowa PowerPlex 16 515, Northern Lights 16-1 and MAVS KC 16-1. None of them have bids and that’s certainly about to change, as two of the four should qualify. The other pools features already-qualified Nebraska One 16 Synergy, along with TAV 16 Black, Skyline 16 Royal and Six Pack 16. We know trickle down can’t go past fourth place, and that’s if Nebraska One finishes second or better. It’s pretty straight forward if that happens, as the the first or second-place team in Nebraska One’s pool along with the other top-two finishers in Pool 1 qualify. Where it gets wild is if Nebraska One doesn’t finish in the top four. In that scenario, the pool winners will qualify, with a third-place match for the final bid between the two second-place squads. MAVS KC had a big day, winning a must-win clash with Dynasty 16 Black. Both teams were 1-1 with the winner reaching the gold pools. MAVS is currently ranked No. 44, while Dynasty sits at No. 30. The only other team in 16 Open with a bid in Premier Nebraska 16 Gold finished in a three-way tie with Tulsa Power 16-1 and Six Pack 16 at 1-2. Premier Nebraska took third and is out of gold pools. Six Pack took second, while Tulsa Power took fourth a day after upsetting top seed Nebraska One. The format is different in 15 Open. Instead of two, four-team pools, there are two, three-team pools. What really matters though is that both Skyline 15 Royal and TAV 15 Black are both qualified and are in separate pools. Skyline is matched with MAVS 816 15-1 and Premier Nebraska 15 Gold. TAV is with Pohaku 15-1 and OP2 15-1. But, with just two bids available instead of three trickle down can extend to fourth place. No further. Skyline is the top team in the country, so there’s a good chance Skyline wins its pool. Same goes for TAV. In that situation, the second-place finishers would both qualify. Should neither TAV nor Skyline win their respective pools, then the two pool winners would both qualify. DAY 2 SHOW STOPPERS Malayah Long S VCNebraska 17 Elite: A 4-star Marquette recruit, Long helped VCNebraska remain in contention for an Open bid. She’s a smooth disher with a strong grip on the offense. She can set tempo and doesn’t miss her spots very often. Lolo Lambert OH Drive Nation 17 Red: Given the considerable talent in the 17 Open division, to say Lambert, to say Lambert had the biggest hammer of them all isn’t an understatement. The 4-star Arkansas high-flier was denting the floor at times. Ava Martin S Pohaku 17-1: Martin – a 3-star recruit – and her Pohaku teammates had a rough day and were eliminated from contention after going 0-3. Martin does well moving the ball around and getting all her hitters involved in the attack. Luca Bredenberg L/DS Northern Lights 17-1: A 3-star Lipscomb commit, Bredenberg and Northern Lights were also knocked out of bid contention after going 0-3. She’s often asked to pass half the court in serve receive and does a fine job defending the back row. Reese Ptacek MB Northern Lights 17-1: It was tough at times to get Ptacek involved with Northern Lights struggling to pass, but when she was able to get set she produced. The 3-star Kansas commit takes up a lot of space at the net and does well finding open space to exploit. McKenna Brand L/DS Skyline 17 Royal: Brand – a 3-star Connecticut commit – helped Skyline advance to the gold pools with her backrow effort Sunday. She was passing soundly in serve receive and keeping Skyline in system. Mia Tvrdy MB Premier Nebraska 17 Gold: Tvrdy and her Premier Nebraska teammates are already qualified and could play a factor in trickle down as they made the gold pools. Tvrdy was a problem in the middle for opposing defenses. She’s strong, gets off the

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Show Me: Day 1 Show Stoppers And More

Some Day 1s are fire. Other times they are the spark for the fire for Days 2 and 3. It was latter case on the opening day of the 2023 version of the Show Me Qualifier in Kansas City. It was an especially different beginning in 15 Open from other qualifiers because there were no teams eliminated on Day 1. There are three, six-team pools in 15 Open and so no teams were cut from bid contention Saturday. The top contenders in Skyline 15 Royal, Pohaku 15-1 and TAV 15 Black combined to go 9-0. It was the typical format in both 16 and 17 Open. The biggest news was top-seed Nebraska One 16 Synergy going down. Nebraska One is one of two teams in 16 Open with a bid, so there’s nothing to lose so-to-speak for Nebraska One. But Tulsa Power 16-1 pulling off the big upset of the No. 6 team in the nation definitely shakes up the seedings for Day 2. Tulsa Power takes over the top seed and is now in a pool with AJV 16 Adidas, Premier Nebraska 16 Gold and Six Pack 16. Premier Nebraska already owns a bid and we could’ve seen both previously-qualified teams in the same pool. Instead, Nebraska One is now the No. 4 team in Pool 2, along with Dynasty 16 Black, MAVS KC 16-1 and Adversity 16 Adidas. That’s a tough break for those teams, as Nebraska One should advance and take away a spot from one of three. Nebraska One wasn’t the only No. 1 team in its pool to fall in 16 Open. Skyline 16 Royal stumbled in its opener against PVA 16 Elite and finished in a three-way tie with PVA and VCNebraska 16 Elite at 2-1. Skyline still wound up first based on tiebreakers though, with PVA taking second place. It was a good day for Iowa Power Plex 16U, which went 2-1 as the No. 4 team in Pool 6. Iowa Power Plex defeated both KC Power 16-1 and Muscle VB 16-1 Black to advance along with 3-0 Northern Lights 16-1. There were minor upsets and movement in 17 Open. Both Six Pack 17 – in Pool 1 – and Shockwave 17 Black – in Pool 3 – were the only non-Nos. 1 and 2s to advance. They were both the No. 3 team in their respective pools and moved on. OT 17 Felix, VCNebraska 17 Elite and Pohaku 17-1 all lost as No. 1 teams in their respective pools. All three finished second and still advanced. DAY 1 SHOW STOPPERS Leah Robinson OH MAVS 816 15-1: Robinson helped her MAVS teammates to a 2-1 mark and are poised to advance from the six-team pool on Day 2. Robinson is a presence on the court with her size. She’s a great offensive option for MAVS and she’s utilized a bunch in the attack. Rayna Christianson S/RS Northern Lights 15-1: Christianson – a 5-star recruit – and Northern Lights have work to do to break pool after going 1-2 on Day 1. Christianson, with her size and length, is such a factor anywhere she’s on the court. She’s the team’s best scoring threat across the front row and a sound setter in the back. Anna O’Keefe S Northern Lights 15-1: O’Keefe can keep the offense churning when she checks in. She has good hands and touch. Romi Chlebecek OH Northern Lights 15-1: Chelbecek is a bit undersized on the left but she doesn’t back down. She stays aggressive and keeps on taking swings and pressuring the defense. Addison West OH Premier Nebraska 15 Gold: A 3-star recruit, West has tons of potential and will be someone to watch as she keeps adding strength and power. She’s the go-to on the left for this squad and she provides her share of offense. Paighton Erb MB Premier Nebraska 15 Gold: Erb is another member of the rooster who looks to have lots of upside too as she continues developing. She’s lanky with a quick arm swing and someone defenses need to be ready to get the ball. Malia Miller OH Integrity 15 Intense Blue: It was our second time seeing Miller this season. Her and her teammates went 2-1 on the opening day and remain alive to break pool on Day 2. She’s a six-rotation go-to hitter. She’s raw and still developing but she is solid across the back row and showed a nice arm. Carlyle Johnson MB Shockwave 15 Black: Johnson was a factor in the middle as Shockwave went 1-2. She has some height and she was swinging and scoring well. Taylor Stanley RS Dynasty 15 Black: Stanley made us take notice with her play at the night. She’s a tall right side with huge upside. She has a nice arm and was doing well touching balls at the net. Makenzie Walsh RS Kairos 15 Alpha: The lefty was a reliable scoring option as Kairos wrapped up the day 1-2 in Pool 3. She has good size and swings well, helping her team open up the attack when she was front row. Audrey Bassett OH NE Elite 15 Phoenix: Bassett was an outside who was bringing it on the attack. She’s a bit undersized but has a big arm and hits a heavy ball. She isn’t afraid of bigger blocks either and had NE Eilte in contention to upset TAV 15 Black before falling in three. Taya Thaden MB NE Elite 15 Phoenix: Thaden displayed her scoring ability. Though she didn’t get the ball a lot, the times she did she was effective. She has a quick swing and hits with pace. Sydney Light MB Iowa Power Plex 15 Black: At 2-1, Iowa Power Plex is looking well to break its pool and make the challenge rounds on Day 2. Light is active in the middle and will get set when in system. She hits out of the middle and runs slide. Taylor Clarke RS Skyline 15 Royal: Clarke – a 4-star recruit

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Show Me: Preview and Predictions (FREE)

It’s a busy, busy weekend with multiple qualifiers happening at literally almost every corner of the country. There’s bid competition in Spokane, St. Louis, Atlanta and Philly. And of course, Kansas City! The Show Me Qualifier is where I’ll be spending this weekend and providing coverage of the three-day event. Below, we take a look at the 15-17 Open divisions and take a guess as to what might happen. 17 OPEN Number of Teams: 30 Number of Bids Available: 3   Previously-Qualified Teams (5): Dynasty 17 Black; Drive Nation 17 Red; Premier Nebraska 17 Gold; OT 17 Felix; Rev 17-1 Raptors vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (14): 2. Dynasty 17 Black 3. Drive Nation 17 Red 4. TAV 17 Black 12. Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 13. Premier Nebraska 17 Gold 16. Pohaku 17-1 19. KC Power 17 Black 20. OT 17 Felix 30. Skyline 17 Royal 31. VCNebraska 17 Elite 42. Iowa Power Plex 17U 47. Rev 17-1 Raptors 48. Shockwave 17 Black 49. Northern Lights 17-1 5-Star Athletes to Know: Lauren Medeck OH Premier Nebraska 17 Gold (South Dakota) Faith Frame L/DS Premier Nebraska 17 Gold (Cincinnati) Skyler Pierce OH Dynasty 17 Black (Nebraska) Cy Rae Campbell MB Dynasty 17 Black (Wake Forest) Lauren Harden OH Rev 17-1 Raptors (Florida) Ayden Ames MB Drive Nation 17 Red (Nebraska) Favor Anyanwu MB TAV 17 Black (USC) Jadyn Livings OH TAV 17 Black (USC) Camille Edwards S TAV 17 Black (Michigan) Reese Messer S Dynasty 17 Black (2025) Abigail Mullen RS Dynasty 17 Black (2025) Gillian Pitts L/DS TAV 17 Black (2025) Cari Spears OH TAV 17 Black (2025) 4-Star Athletes to Know: Malayah Long S VCNebraska 17 Elite (Marquette) Paisley Douglas L/DS VCNebraska 17 Elite (USC) Fallon Stewart OH OT 17 Felix (Cincinnati) Mia Tvrdy MB Premier Nebraska 17 Gold (Oregon) Lolo Lambert OH Drive Nation 17 Red (Arkansas) Janelle Green S KC Power 17 Black (Cincinnati) Grace Carroll RS Drive Nation 17 Red (Baylor) Camdyn Stucky S Shockwave 17 Black (Tennessee) Gracie Morrow OH Shockwave 17 Black (Wichita State) Bethanie Wu S Drive Nation 17 Red (Yale) Carson Eickenloff S Drive Nation 17 Red (Ole Miss) Ryan McAleer L/DS Dynasty 17 Black (Purdue) Lauren Salata OH Adversity 17 Adidas Ava Pratt OH Adversity 17 Adidas (Northwestern) Mikala Young OH TAV 17 Black (TCU) Anna Boatner MB TAV 17 Black Jade Ingram MB Dynasty 17 Black (UNLV) Mak Miller MB Pohaku 17-1 (2025) Jordan Smith OH/RS Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite (2025) Maya Witherspoon OH Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite (2025) Outlook/Prediction: This division is not for the faint-hearted. It’s not quite as packed as the Big South 17 Open field, but it’s pretty close. The second, third and fourth-ranked teams in the nation from our Top 50 are here, as are eight from the Top 20. With five qualified teams, we know all three bids are going out. There’s sure to be trickle down, but could it go all the way to eighth-place? With this field, it’s definitely possible that all five qualified teams could finish in the top eight. But where do the bids go? TAV 17 Black is the front-runner. TAV lost once at Sunshine and finished in fifth to miss out on a bid. It would be a huge upset to see TAV not finish in a spot to qualify here. TAV is a gold-medal favorite, right with Dynasty 17 Black and Drive Nation 17 Red. Dynasty has two second-place showings at Northern Lights and MEQ and would love to actually add a gold at Show Me. Drive Nation took first at Red Rock and is looking to add another gold to its collection. Premier Nebraska 17 Gold, OT 17 Felix and Rev 17-1 Raptors are the other teams with bids and could factor into trickle down. Rev qualified at NEQ and will have to up its game to get into contention in KC. Premier Nebraska qualified back at Northern Lights and should finish in the top eight. As should OT Felix. It still leaves the bids. Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite, KC Power 17-1 and Pohaku 17-1 are all contenders along with TAV. Pohaku beat KC Power at MEQ in a must-win fifth-place bracket match but fell a victory short of a bid when it lost to Boiler Jrs 17 Gold and took sixth. Rockwood Thunder is looking to create some of its own luck. Rockwood Thunder finished fourth at Northern Lights, tied for fifth at NEQ and in a tough-break lost just once at MEQ – to Pohaku – and finished 13th. Ultimately, I like Drive Nation topping TAV in the final, while Dynasty beats Pohaku for third. Rockwood Thunder outlasts VCNebraska for fifth place, joining TAV and Pohaku in qualifying. *** 16 OPEN Number of Teams: 30 Number of Bids Available: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (2): Nebraska One 16 Synergy; Premier Nebraska 16 Gold vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (10): 6. Nebraska One 16 Synergy 9. TAV 16 Black 26. Northern Lights 16-1 27. Premier Nebraska 16 Gold 30. Dynasty 16 Black 31. Skyline 16 Royal 35. AJV 16 Adidas 38. Rockwood Thunder 16 Elite 41. NE Elite 16 Maverick 44. MAVS KC 16-1 5-Star Athletes to Know: Logan Parks S/RS MAVS 16-1 Natalie Wardlow MB Nebraska One 16 Synergy Ella Florez S/RS Dynasty 16 Black (2026) 4-Star Athletes to Know: Chichi Nnaji RS Skyline 16 Royal Taylor Cook S Skyline 16 Royal Bella Ocampo OH Skyline 16 Royal Mesaiya Bettis OH Northern Lights 16-1 Carly Gilk RS MN Select 16-1 Kennedi Rogers OH AVA TX 16 Adidas Ashlyn Paymal RS NE Elite 16 Maverick Sarah Pfiffner S TAV 16 Black Madison Winkler L/DS TAV 16 Black Audrey Jackson OH TAV 16 Black Lauryn Mack OH TAV 16 Black Sydnee Peterson RS TAV 16 Black Reese Jackson OH TAV 16 Black Leni Stanton-Parker OH Metro 16 Travel Elena Hoecke MB MN Select 16-1 (2026) Outlook/Prediction: I’m excited to see which teams punch their tickets in this division. With Nebraska One 16 Synergy qualifying at Northern Lights, that’s one big bid

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Show Me 17O: Nebraska Premier Perfect; Plus All The Qualifiers

As loaded as the 17 Open division is in 2022, predicting how any qualifier may play out is as difficult as it’s ever been. The only thing that was known for sure was that the three available Open bids were sure to go out at Show Me but it was anyone’s guess how it would all play out. If anyone had Premier Nebraska 17 Gold running the table and producing a perfect weekend at 10-0 in matches and 20-0 in sets then congratulations on that pick. Of course, Premier Nebraska secured its bid way back in January at the Northern Lights Qualifier so there were still the qualifying spots to fill out. Those went to second-place MN Select 17-1, third-place Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite – who tied with MAVS KC 17-1 – and fifth-place Mintonettte Sports m.71, who didn’t benefit from trickle down and needed to defeat Iowa Rockets 17 in bracket play to secure its bid. Below, we tell the tales of how those teams’ weekend played out. PREMIER NEBRASKA 17 GOLD (FIRST, 10-0) Day 1: d IPVA 17 Black 25-13; 25-14; d TIV 17 Asics Black 25-15, 25-7; d NKYVC 17 Tsunami 25-17, 25-13 Day 2: d Illini Elite 17 Cardinal 25-20, 25-17; d NE Elite 17 Vici 25-19, 25-15; d MAVS KC 17-1 25-20, 25-23 Day 3: d Iowa Rockets 17 25-21, 25-12; Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 25-19, 25-22; NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami 25-19, 25-20; d MN Select 17-1 25-15, 27-25   The Northern Lights 18s Qualifier had a bit of twist this season by adding 17 Open and offering three bids back in January. Premier Nebraska joined 1st Alliance 17 Gold and MAVS KC in taking advantage and qualifying early. For Premier Nebraska, the only national tournament in between that one and this past weekend at Show Me was Triple Crown in February. If rust was of any concern, Premier Nebraska didn’t show any and instead played like a team eager to get back to competition and stake its claim as one of the title contenders come Nationals. “The biggest thing this weekend was already having the bid sometimes teams start looking at the finish line instead of continuing getting better,” Nebraska Premier coach Joe Wessel said. “We already had the bid but we didn’t want to take that for granted. We needed to prove why we earned the bid and show we can be one of the best teams in the nation.” The fact that Premier Nebraska was moving through the weekend without losing a set was on their minds but it remained unspoken about until sweeping MN Select in the final and completing the perfect weekend. The run also included beating NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami twice, plus MAVS KC and Rockwood Thunder. “They kept it quiet until we beat MN Select,” Wessel said. “Then it was the first thing they said was that they didn’t lose a set all weekend. We went 20-0 but no one made a big deal of it until it was over.” There’s a lot to like about Premier’s lineup, starting with vballrecruiter.com five-star recruit and right side Grace Heaney. She’s just one of many options Premier throws at opponents, with four-star recruits Destiny Ndam-Simpson and Alanna Bankston being two more. Then there’s middles Kailey Hrbek and Brooklyn Fuchs and outside Stella Adeyemi for setters Ivy Leuck and Reese Booth to utilize as well. Olivia Mauch – a five-star Class of 2024 recruit – and Makenzie Dyrstad can take turns trading off between libero and DS. “We can make changes to our lineup,” Wessel said. “We have an athletic, versatile team. Some matches we can play girls on the right side. Other matches we can play them on the left side. We have two really good defensive players that we switch up at times too. We don’t really have a set lineup. We do run a true 6-2 so all 10 girls can showcase their talents.” *** MN SELECT 17-1 (SECOND, 8-1) Day 1: d Co Jrs 17 Kevin 25-10, 25-22, 25-17; d HPSTL 17 Royal 27-25, 25-22, 25-23 Day 2: d Madfrog 17 Black 25-21, 25-14; d Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite 25-16, 25-23; d KC Power 17-1 19-25, 25-23, 18-16 Day 3: d Dynasty 17 Black 21-25, 25-16, 15-11; d MAVS KC 17-1 18-25, 25-21, 15-6; d Mintonette Sports m.71 25-20, 30-28; l Premier Nebraska 17 Gold 25-15, 27-25   Last month at MEQ, MN Select needed to win its gold pool – one that included Circle City 17 Purple – to have a shot at qualifying. At Show Me, it wasn’t so cutthroat for MN Select, which merely needed to finish in the top three in its gold pool to stay in the hunt for a bid. MN Select ended up taking matters into its own hands, downing Dynasty 17 Black, MAVS KC and Mintonette before falling to Premier Nebraska in the final to qualify without any trickle down. “We cut down on our errors,” MN Select coach George Padjen said. “We have some physical hitters and we can be really good offensively. We have a great setter but if we can’t pass we can’t get good swings. We were passing better and Stella (Swenson) was making good decisions getting everyone looks.” MN Select redesigned its roster that finished 13th in 16 Open last summer. Among those back are outsides Avery Bolles and Marlie Hanson. Plus middle Kate Simington and libero Kate Thibault – both three-star recruits. That left room for many newcomers, including the five-star recruit Swenson and her sister and outside hitter Olivia Swenson – a three-star recruit. Another key addition was 6-4 right side and four-star recruit Sydney Schnichels. Joining the trio was also L/DS Sophia Johnson and middles Annika Veurink and Kaia Caffee, a sophomore like the Swenson sisters and another five-star recruit. The focus moving forward for the group is continuing tightening up its play and taking some of the close sets that have gone against them. In the team’s last four qualifier losses

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Show Me 15O: Nebraska One Takes Gold; 3 Bids Awarded

Going into 15 Open at the Show Me Qualifier in Kansas City all three bids had to be awarded out as trickle down could only extend to sixth place and no further. It was just a matter of how previously-qualified teams in Dynasty 15 Black, Nebraska One 15 Synergy and Circle City 15 Purple would factor into the mix. The answer was heavily. Nebraska One wound up defeating Dynasty in the final in straight sets, while Circle City tied for third place with NE Elite 15 Matrix. That gave NE Elite the first bid. The last two went to fifth-place finishers in Northern Lights 15-1 and HPSTL 15 Royal. Here’s a rundown of the teams’ path to their finishes. NEBRASKA ONE 15 SYNERGY (FIRST, 8-2) Day 1: l MAVS 816 15-1 25-19, 15-25, 15-10; d FRVBC 15 Black 25-16, 25-14; d ECJ 15-1 25-12, 25-20 Day 2: l MAVS KC 15-1 25-20, 25-20; d Skyline 15 Royal 25-18, 25-22; d OP2 15-1 25-14, 25-18 Day 3: d HPSTL 15 Royal 19-25, 29-27, 15-8; d Mich Elite 15 Mizuno 25-21, 25-22; d NE Elite 15 Matrix 25-13, 25-21; d Dynasty 15 Black 25-16, 25-15   As long as Nebraska One wasn’t playing a MAVS team, it proved untouchable on its way to winning the 15 Open division. Having clinched an Open bid previously at Northern Lights, there was no pressure on Nebraska One in terms of finishing in a spot to qualify. However, long before Nebraska One was in a position to finish on top of the field, it was simply looking to survive Day 1 after losing its opening match of the weekend to MAVS 816 15-1. It wasn’t reason to panic necessarily but another loss in pool play would knock out Nebraska One much earlier than anyone expected. That was never in danger of happening with the way Nebraska One responded, sweeping FRVBC 15-1 Black and ECJ 15-1 to take second. The loss did put Nebraska One in a much tougher Day 2 pool and again the Great Plains Region club received an early-morning wakeup call with a setback to MAVS KC 15-1 in straight sets in its first match. With Skyline 15 Royal up next, there was no guarantee Nebraska One would advance. But once again, Nebraska One found its form and swept past Skyline and OP2 15-1 to move into gold pools. Once there, there was no stopping Nebraska One on Day 3. Nebraska One fought past HPSTL, Mich Elite 15 Mizuno and NE Elite to make the final, where Nebraska One swept Dynasty, 25-16, 25-15, to claim the championship. Nebraska One was in position to make the final at Northern Lights but fell to Drive Nation 15 Red in its final gold pool match. That left Nebraska One in a showdown with Northern Lights for the final bid. Nebraska One took that contest in straight sets, 25-10, 25-22, to secure its bid. Outside of 6-4 middle blocker and vballrecruiter.com four-star recruit Natalie Wardlow, Nebraska One doesn’t have the size of some other teams in the division. It also relies on seventh-grade setter Malorie Boesiger to run the show and she definitely plays with a maturity beyond her age. Outside hitters Mattie Kamery and three-star recruit Anna Jelinek are both steady with a knack for scoring against bigger blocks. Kacey Porter helps balance the offense with her attacking on the right side, while Nebraska One relies on Kendall Cose in the other middle position. Also, Keri Leimbach showed herself to be one of the more impressive liberos in the division flying around the court making plays. *** DYNASTY 15 BLACK (SECOND, 8-2) Day 1: d Synergy 15-1 25-23, 25-18; d Nebraska Jrs 15 Black 25-12, 25-16; d Rockwood Thunder 15 Elite 25-19, 25-16 Day 2: NE Elite 15 Matrix 25-22, 25-19; d Premier Nebraska 15 Gold 25-16, 23-25, 15-10; d MKE Sting 15 Gold 26-24, 25-19 Day 3: d Northern Lights 15-1 25-17, 25-10; d Circle City 15 Purple 11-25, 25-22, 15-13; l MAVS 15 KC 15-1 25-23, 25-23; l Nebraska One 15 Synergy 25-16, 25-15 We were on hand at MEQ in Indy when Dynasty captured first place and clinched its 15 Open bid. There, Dynasty reeled off victories in its last five outings and kept it going in KC, where it took its first eight matches before dropping its final two, including in the final to Nebraska One. Dynasty also lost to MAVS KC in gold pool play but had already clinched first place and its spot in the final. It was Dynasty’s defense and ability to extend rallies and take advantage that led to its success in Indy and the Heart of America Region club continued on with that style of play in KC. Dynasty is not an overly big team but has one of the most reliable outsides in the division in three-star recruit Lauren Lopez. The attack was helped out by Jenna McClure, who showed some strong play at outside as well. Setters Ella Florez and Emma Christian also had middles Epifania Salamasina and Isabel Glover to work with, as well as right sides Leah Russell-Bova and Ashlee Chavez. Hadley Porter was her usually steady self at libero to anchor the defense and set the tone. Up next for Dynasty is Windy City, where it opens as the No. 1 seed and will look to triple qualify. *** CIRCLE CITY 15 PURPLE (T-THIRD, 7-2) Day 1: d Premier Nebraska 15 Gold 25-11, 18-25, 15-13; d Team Momentum 15 Navy 25-8, 25-17; d OT 15 Meg 25-19, 25-20 Day 2: l HPSTL 15 Royal 25-19, 16-25, 15-7; d Rockwood Thunder 15 Elite 19-25, 25-15, 15-11; d Tulsa Power 15-1 26-24, 29-27 Day 3: d MAVS KC 15-1 25-20, 20-25, 15-11; l Dynasty 15 Black 11-25, 25-22, 15-13; d Northern Lights 15-1 25-16, 25-22 After defeating Legacy 15-1 Adidas in the third-place match at MEQ, Circle City arrived knowing there would be no such dramatics in terms of bidding at Show Me. That’s

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Show Me 16O: Circle City Champs; NKYVC, OT Join In Qualifying

Dynasty 16 Black was untouchable in its first two qualifiers of the season – winning both Northern Lights and MEQ. The Heart of America Region club was continuing its dominance into Day 3 at Show Me until NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami finally found a way to solve it in their gold pool meeting. The huge victory not only eventually gave NKYVC a bid, it helped propel the squad into the final. There, however, NKYVC ran into a red-hot Circle City 16 Purple group that wasn’t going to be denied as the Hoosier Region club finished off its undefeated run to the 16 Open championship and earned its bid as well. With Dynasty, KC Power 16-1 and Premier Nebraska 16 Gold already having bids and finishing in the top six, it created trickle down with OT 16 Roberto taking advantage and earning the final qualifying spot on the weekend. Here’s a look at these teams’ weekends in Kansas City. CIRLCE CITY 16 PURPLE (FIRST, 10-0) Day 1: d USA South 16 Premier 25-18, 15-25, 15-10; d MKE Sting 16 Gold 20-25, 30-28, 15-6; d HPSTL 15 Royal 25-15, 25-18 Day 2: d Nebraska Jrs 16 Black 25-22, 25-13; d Pohaku 16 25-17, 25-17; d NKYVC 16 Tsunami 25-18, 21-25, 15-12 Day 3: d Premier Nebraska 16 Gold 25-22, 18-25, 15-9; d HPSTL 16 Royal 25-16, 25-20; d KC Power 16-1 21-25, 25-22, 15-13; d NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami 25-22, 22-25, 17-15   At MEQ, Circle City put itself in a position to get a bid in its hometown but went 0-2 in gold pools with straight set losses to 1st Alliance 16 Gold and NKYVC. It was part of a rough finish in Indy, where after winning its first five outings Circle City dropped three in a row. With the grit and determination Circle City played with at Show Me, it was bound not to let that happen again. The path to the bid was not without its challenges as Circle City needed to pull out three-set victories six times, including in four of its final five matches. Two of those types of victories came against NKYVC – once on Day 2 and then again in an exciting conclusion in the championship match as Circle City won 17-15 in Game 3. Circle City also picked up impressive victories over previously-qualified Premier Nebraska and KC Power – both in three as well. The weekend kicked off in that fashion too, with Circle City going three in victories over USA South 16 Premier and MKE Sting 16 Gold on Day 1. Circle City went with the same lineup at MEQ and Show Me. Five-star recruit Ava Utterback was a featured part of the attack with her explosiveness on the outside. Sophia Mayo also had a strong effort at the other outside position, as did right side and three-star recruit Alexis Maesch. Setter and three-star recruit Emery Moore was also finding Caroline Frost, Scarlett Kimbrell and Dakota Elliott in the middle. Kimbrell and Elliott are three-star recruits, along with libero Alleigh Dutton. Dutton was part of a steady back row that also featured defensive specialists Rachel Vorst and Chloe Gilley. *** NKYVC 16-1 TSUNAMI (SECOND, 8-2) Day 1: d KC Power 16 Red 25-21, 25-13; d IPVA 16 Black 25-12, 25-4; d OP2 16-1 25-17, 25-15 Day 2: d Pohaku 16-1 25-21, 25-21; d Nebraska Jrs 16 Black 25-5, 25-12; l Circle City 16 Purple 25-18, 21-25, 15-12 Day 3: d Six Pack 16 25-17, 22-25, 15-9; d Dynasty 16 Black 25-19, 15-25, 15-11; d OT 16 Roberto 25-11, 26-28, 16-14; l Circle City 16 Purple 25-22, 22-25, 17-15   Few teams were as eager to get another crack at qualifying as NKYVC was. Its only setback at MEQ – a 15-13 loss in Game 3 to 1st Alliance – cost NKYVC its bid in Indy. Even then it wasn’t like NKYVC put it on its opponents en route to qualifying at Show Me. There was a definite grind to its second-place showing as NKYVC went three sets in its final five contests, including losses to Circle City on Day 2 and again in the final. However, NKYVC picked up arguably the most impressive victory of the season so far when it handed Dynasty its first loss in qualifying play. But given the wackiness of qualifiers the triumph over Dynasty still left NKYVC needing to beat OT or else NKYVC could finish third in the pool. Either way, NKYVC was still looking at a bid but no doubt deserved better after upsetting Dynasty. NKYVC pulled it out against OT in three – 16-14 in Game 3 – to finish its gold pool on top and reach the final. “I think it was exciting,” NKYVC coach Tyler Collins said. “It was a fun weekend going 8-2 and beating the No. 1 team in the country. We just missed the mark at MEQ. We were just a hair shy and we went back to practice working on different things.” Dynasty had NKYVC’s number at Triple Crown and NKYVC was determined to put up a better showing this time around. One key focus was trying to attack Dynasty from the service line and it worked. “We really served them hard,” Collins said. “We have a lot of respect for Skyler (Pierce) and their right side Abigail (Mullen). They have another really good outside too (Carlie Cisneros). We wanted to go really aggressive on serves against them. It helped tremendously. It limited their middle exposure and that allowed our middles to cheat and put up a better block.” Collins said he could talk about each individual in detail. The weekend was that good. Yet, he did want to make sure setter Abby Yoder – a three-star recruit – received just due. “I think people look past her but she did a phenomenal job,” he said. “She’s IQ heavy and was able to make the different sets that needed to be made. She finds our middles often and that relates

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Show Me: Top Outsides

The Show Me Qualifier proved to be one of the best ones we’ve been at yet. vballrecruiter.com spent time throughout the three days watching and observing as many teams and players as we possibly could. Below are the outside hitters who caught our attention the most. 15 OPEN Ava Ball, Northern Lights 15-1 – This 5-11 outside is also listed as a libero on Lights’ roster because she can pass well and strong ball skills. She’s a three-star recruit with a nice swing and hits with good pace. Lauren Lopez, Dynasty 15 Black – Lopes is a 5-10 three-star recruit. She jumps well and can really light it up when she gets a hold of one! Ava Tilden, NKYVC 15-1 Tsunami – Tilden seems to have a tall ceiling as she continues to improve. She’s 6-0 with a fluid swing and is a good option on the left for NKYVC. Shay Heaney, Premier Nebraska 15 Gold – There’s tons of upside to Heaney’s game. She’s currently a three-star recruit but this 6-1 outside could move up as she develops. She’s lengthy with a smooth swing and can hammer the ball. Logan Bell, Circle City 15 Purple – A 5-11 three-star recruit, Bell has a whip for an arm. She’s an aggressive hitter who uses the block well. Madison Hooper, Ozark Jrs 15 Elite – Don’t give Hooper an open look because she can rip it! She can score in a variety of ways. This 6-1 outside has plenty of upside! Hannah Leftridge, HPSTL 15 Royal – We saw Leftridge at MEQ earlier this season and this 5-9 outside knows how to compete. She hits all around and has great ball control and defense. Hannah Taylor, HPSTL 15 Royal – HPSTL was down a starting outside from MEQ but qualified anyway at Show Me in part because of Taylor’s contributions. She was solid on the outside and proved to be a reliable scorer who was taking aggressive swings and challenging the block. Kierstin Bevelle, OT 15 Meg – Bevelle was showing good passing skills out of serve receive. She also has an easy swing when she was attacking. Kelsie Thompson, ECJ 15-1 – Thompson is a 5-11 wirey outside and currently a three-star recruit. She’s a strong six rotation player who is capable of delivering some big kills. 16 OPEN Aowyn Schrader, Premier Nebraska 16 Gold – A 6-1 three-star recruit, Schrader can play on the left or in the middle. She’s a physical player who can pound the ball down. Ava Utterback, Circle City 16 Purple – Few in the gym impress in the ways Utterback does. It’s clear to see why this 6-0 outside is a five-star recruit. She touches 10-0 and is absolutely explosive on the attack. Sophia Mayo, Circle City 16 Purple – Filling out the outside spots for Circle City is Mayo. She’s 6-2 with a strong arm and gives Circle City another solid option on the left. Reis Baune, Northern Lights 16-1 – This 6-0 outside was passing well out of serve receive nad keeping Northern Lights in system. She also has a quick arm and can generate pace on her shots. Tia Traudt, VCNebraska 16 Elite – VCNebraska has a good one in Traudt. She’s 6-0 and playing up an age group. She has a nice swing and really gets after it attacking the block and hitting with pace. Fallon Stewart, OT 16 Roberto – Stewart is part of a strong outside duo for OT. She’s long at 6-2 and she doesn’t back down. Her future is bright! Amina N’diaye, OT 16 Roberto – The sky is the limit for N’diaye! She’s a freshman playing up and is a four-star recruit. At 6-1, she gets up very well and can take over in stretches. Ava Spachek, Pohaku 16-1 – Pohaku can cause problems for anyone. Part of that is the play of this 5-10 outside. Spachek isn’t as big and physical as some other outsides but she makes up for it with hard, aggressive swings that pressures the defense. Payton Petersen, Six Pack 16 – Petersen plays a big role as a six-rotation outside for Six Pack. She’s 6-0 and the go-to hitter who Six Pack turns to when it really needs a point. She has a great arm and hits with authority. Alivia Skidmore, NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami – Skidmore was playing at an MVP level on Day 3 in helping NKYVC reach the final and earn its bid. She’s 5-10 and touches 9-10 and was causing Dynasty 16 Black all sorts of trouble in their gold pool meeting. Skyler Pierce, Dynasty 16 Black – Pierce is no doubt a next-level talent. At 6-2 and already touching 10-3, she’s a five-star recruit with a limitless future. She’s an electric scorer with delivers some eye-popping kills. Carlie Cisneros, Dynasty 16 Black – It’s hard to find a better outside duo in this age group than Dynasty has with Pierce and Cisenros, who is a four-star recruit. She’s 6-0 and almost touches 10-0. She’s solid in the back row and is a smart attacker who is tough to slow down. 17 OPEN Ava Hoying, Mintonette Sports. m71 – A three-star recruit, Hoying is a steadying six-rotation player who does just about everything for Mintonette. She’s 6-0 and is very strong and powerful when she goes on the attack.   Reagan Fox, KC Power 17-1 – A 6-2 outside committed to Rutgers, Fox is a three-star recruit. She provides KC Power with steady and consistent scoring on the left with her smooth swing. Samantha Laird, NE Elite 17 Vici – Committed to South Dakota, Laird is 6-0 and plays an important role in the NE Elite attack. She has a fluid swing and is a smart attacker. Caitlyn Little, Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite – Little helped Rockwood Thunder to a bid with her strong play. She’s a 5-10 three-star recruit who jumps well and hits with power. Ava Siefke, NKYVC 17-1 Tsunami – This 6-1 outside

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Show Me: Top Right Sides

The Show Me Qualifier proved to be one of the best ones we’ve been at yet. vballrecruiter.com spent time throughout the three days watching and observing as many teams and players as we possibly could. Below are the right sides who caught our attention the most. 15 OPEN Mesaiya Bettis, Northern Lights 15-1 – Bettis is still raw and that’s scary! This 6-0 four-star recruit touches 10-1 and has incredible upside. Add she grows and adds some muscle she’s going to be a very difficult cover on the right side. Carly Gilk, Synergy 15-1 – College coaches are already talking about Gilk! She’s a 6-2 four-star recruit who already has physicality to her game. She plays all the way around and is even part of serve receive for Synergy. Gabby Orlet, HPSTL 15 Royal – It was a great weekend for HPSTL, which earned its Open bid despite having some key injuries. Helping make up the slack was this 5-10 lefty. She hits a heavy ball and allowed HPSTL to balance out its attack. Ava Wilson, Tulsa Power 15-1 – We didn’t see a whole lot of Wilson and her smooth swing. But what we did see it looks like this lefty has potential to make noise in the future! Ashlyn Paymal, NE Elite 15 Matrix – This 6-3 three-star recruit certainly impressed! She was unstoppable at times and a key part of the NE Elite attack. They line her up all across the front row, allowing her to hit from the left, middle and right side and she has all the shots. 16 OPEN Alexis Maesch, Circle City 16 Purple – A 5-11 lefty, Maesch can get after it at times and smack down some impressive winners. She’s a three-star recruit. Kananihokuao “Nele” Misipeka, Pohaku 16-1 – Misipeka is incredibly fun to watch! This three-star recruit makes things look easy on the court. She’s really physical and though she’s undersized is a strong blocker with great timing. Jillian Huckabey, KC Power 16-1 – Huckabey impresses with her pure arm swing and ability to launch balls. She’s a 5-11 three-star recruit with potential to move up the rankings. Abigail Mullen, Dynasty 16 Black – Mullen is special! It’s that simple with her. She has an unassuming way about her. That’s okay because her game does all the talking. She’s a 6-3 five-star recruit playing up an age group. She has a heavy arm and pounds balls. She’s also a menacing blocker on the right. 17 OPEN Lauryn Bowie, Mintonette Sports m.71 – A three-star recruit headed to Virginia, Bowie is 6-2 and touches 9-11. She’s as physical as they come on the right side. She’s capable of coming up with some resounding stuff blocks that are something to see! Elizabeth Goodenow, MAVS KC 17-1 – We’ve written about Goodenow – a three-star recruit – before. She’s committed to Yale and has the potential to do special things in the Ivy League. She’s a 6-0 lefty with a powerful arm and ability to take over matches at times. Gabriella Placide, Co Jrs 17 Kevin – Placide is 6-2, touches 10-5 and is committed to Northern Colorado. She can liven up the Co Jrs attack in a hurry. She delivers some eye-opening kills at times! Claire Morrissey, Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite – This 5-11 right side is playing up a year and has potential to make waves as she continues on. She plays all the way around, hits a pretty heavy ball and is active in the back row. Avery Van Hook, S/RS, Iowa Rockets 17 – A 5-11 lefty, Van Hook is fun to watch as she plays with lots of energy and passion. She’s strong as both a setter and a hitter and Iowa Rockets wouldn’t be the same without her. She’s committed to South Dakota. Sydney Schnichels, MN Select 17-1 – Schnichels – a 6-4 four-star recruit committed to Minnesota – shined throughout the weekend. She’s plays all the way around and even passes in serve receive. She has an easy swing that generates plenty of pace and with her length can go over blocks effortlessly. Grace Heaney, Premier Nebraska 17 Gold – Heaney is 6-2 but seems to play even longer than that! She’s a five-star recruit committed to Purdue who touches 10-2. She rips from the right side with a fluid swing.

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Show Me: Top Middle Blockers

The Show Me Qualifier proved to be one of the best ones we’ve been at yet. vballrecruiter.com spent time throughout the three days watching and observing as many teams and players as we possibly could. Below are the middles who caught our attention the most. 15 OPEN Natalie Wardlow, Nebraska One 15 Synergy – What tremendous potential this 6-4 middle carries in her future! She’s a four-star recruit and helped lift Nebraska One to the 15 Open crown. With her height she can hit over the block and score with ease. Keira Schmidt, Northern Lights 15-1 – This lanky middle is 6-5 with lots of upside to her game. She can hit straight down and makes it tough on defenders to pick up her tough angles. Reanna Lee, Boiler Jrs 15 Gold – A 5-10 middle, Lee is a three-star recruit. Though she’s not as tall as some other middles she faces, she is an efficient scorer with a nice swing to her. Epifania Salamasina, Dynasty 15 Black – This 5-10 middle has some physicality to her. She gets up pretty well and is capable of bashing one down when the option is there. Reese Dunkle, Circle City 15 Purple – At 6-2, Dunkle is a three-star recruit. She moves well and has a very fluid swing. She’s one to keep tabs on! Ellen Zapp, Circle City 15 Purple – Zapp was playing well in KC. She’s 6-0 and can fill different spots for Circle City, including on the right or in the middle. She has a quick swing and isn’t afraid to go for it. Tara Greenberry, HPSTL 15 Royal – This 6-2 middle can really drop the hammer when she gets a hold of one! She’s a physical presence in the middle who should continue to develop and grow. Faith Venable, VCNebraska 15 Elite – Venable runs the slide smoothly. She has a nice swing and hits well on the move. 16 OPEN Mia Tvrdy, Premier Nebraska 16 Gold – A 6-0 three-star recruit, Tvrdy has flashes of dominance! She’s athletic and jumps well. She can really get on top of the ball and crush it down with her strong arm. Melae Lacy, Iowa Rockets 16 – This 5-10 middle could be a bit of a sleeper and a great get for someone down the road! She plays basketball as well and you can see it in the way she jumps and gets after it on the attack. Reese Ptacek, Northern Lights 16-1 – Keep an eye on Ptacek! She’s 6-3 and touches 10-0. She runs a great slide. Alexis Alexander, Pohaku 16-1 – This 6-1 middle is a three-star recruit. She gets off the ground well and is a physical hitter who Pohaku likes to run on the slide too. Julia Hunt, NKYVC 16-1 Tsunami – Hunt is definitely one to know about! She’s a four-star recruit with plenty of upside. She’s 6-2 and touches 10-2 with a powerful arm. 17 OPEN Eloise Brandewie, Mintonette Sports m.71 – Brandewie plays with a looseness about her but that’s not to be mistaken for the impact she makes. She’s the real deal! She’s a 6-3 five-star recruit committed to Ohio State and touches 10-2. She’s an effective scorer as Mintonette looks to go to her as much as possible. And she also makes her presence felt defensively with her blocking. Calissa Minatee, Dynasty 17 Black – This 6-0 middle was awarded a golden ticket at the Under Armour Next Camp Series ahead of Show Me and will be part of the UA All-America game. She’s a five-star recruit committed to Minnesota and she is lighting quick with a dynamic jump who can impact the game with her attacking and blocking. Jaya Johnson, PVA 17 Elite – PVA doesn’t have a lot of size outside of this 6-2 middle. It’s crucial they get her involved in the attack but it changes the dynamic of the offense. She’s committed to Creighton. Kaitlyn Sellner, Northern Lights 17-1 – Sellner is one to follow. She remains uncommitted but is going to help some program immensely. She’s a handful in the middle. She moves well, is 6-1 and touches 10-2.

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Show Me: Top Setters

The Show Me Qualifier proved to be one of the best ones we’ve been at yet. vballrecruiter.com spent time throughout the three days watching and observing as many teams and players as we possibly could. Below are the setters who caught our attention the most. 15 OPEN Logan Parks, S/RS, MAVS KC 15-1 – Few players light up a gym like Parks! This five-star recruit is electric and plays a dual role for MAVS setting and hitting. She’s a physically strong setter capable of making some sets others can’t at her age. She’s also springy and gets off the ground well on her attack and can really rip it. Ella Florez, Dynasty 15 Black – An eighth-grader playing up, Florez is a smooth operator helping run a 6-2. She has an easy delivery with pin point accuracy and can really fling it behind her to catch defenses off balanced. Isabelle Brown, Circle City 15 Purple – This three-star recruit does a good job running the offense. There’s really not any flash to her game, she just gets the job done keeping the defense honest with her ability to mix it up and get her hitters good matchups. Peyton Meyer, NE Elite 15 Matrix – Meyer is also a three-star recruit and she’s similar to Meyer in she just knows how to run the offense. There’s not a lot of flash – which trust us isn’t a bad thing! – she’s just solid and steady and calming presence at the position. Ella Keeven, HPSTL 15 Royal – There’s an effortlessness about the way Keeven sets. She’s smooth with nice hands and puts the ball in a nice window for her hitters. 16 OPEN Reagan Hickey, Premier Nebraska 16 Gold – Hickey does well getting all her hitters involved with the offense is in system. She has good touch on the back set and going against the flow so defenses can’t totally lock in on one hitter. Emery Moore, Circle City 16 Purple – This three-star recruit is a competitor! She has a look in her eyes that she’s not backing down. She delivers a consistent ball too and makes some strong defensive reads as well. Janelle Green, KC Power 16-1 – This three-star recruit belongs on the all-attitude team. She’s always smiling and is cheery with her teammates. Oh yeah, and she also sets and directs an offense well! Reese Messer, Dynasty 16 Black – A freshman playing up, Messer is a rare five-star recruit. She’s quick and can get under balls others might not be able to. She can jump set and brings some athleticism and flair to the position. 17 OPEN Logan Jones, MAVS KC 17-1 – Jones is undersized but she’s a gamer and hustler! She’s quick and can really flick the ball around the court. Ella Swindle, KC Power 17-1 – There’s so much to love about this five-star recruit heading to Texas. She was invited to the Under Armour All-America game after receiving a golden ticket at the UA Next Camp series the day before the tourney started. At 6-2, she’s long, smooth and has great hands! Annika Sokol, S/RS, Co Jrs 17 Kevin – Sokol is a two-player for Co Jrs, hitting and setting. She’s a bit undersized at 5-10 when she’s in the front row hitting, but she’s heady and knows how to score. Ashley Mullen, Dynasty 17 Black – Some consider this five-star recruit committed to UCLA to be the best in the class. She’s silky smooth, can run tempo and rarely misses her spots. She’s a next-level talent for sure! Brynne McGhie, Dynasty 17 Black – McGhie is part of a 6-2 with Mullen. One of McGhie’s strength is her ability to mix up her sets and moves the ball around to keep defenses guessing. Juliette Myrick, Rockwood Thunder 17 Elite – This 6-0 setter is a four-star recruit committed to Army. She’s a gamer with a strong competitive drive and connects well with her hitters. Ava Blascziek, Northern Lights 17-1 – The 5-10 Blascziek looks like she’s having fun when she plays! She’s a three-star recruit who does a good job of getting her hitters involved with her distribution. Stella Swenson, MN Select 17-1 – It’s not surprising that this 6-1 setter is a five-star recruit. She has a high IQ and great touch. And there’s not a set she can’t make!

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