SLC Showdown

Salt Lake Showdown 18s: Preview and Predictions

Up next in the 18s qualifying season is the Salt Lake Showdown. A change from the last couple of years is the 18s splitting off into its own weekend instead of being attached with other age groups. Let’s take a look at 18 Open below, where you can see which teams are already qualified, the nationally-ranked teams competing, as well as 4 and 5-star athletes in the mix. SALT LAKE SHOWDOWN 18s  Number of Teams: 24 Number of Bids: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (1): KC Power 18 Black vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (7): 5. KC Power 18 Black KS 11. Wave 18 Brennan CA 13. SCVC 18 Roxy CA 15. Mizuno Long Beach 18 Rockstar CA 23. Club V 18 Ren Reed UT 36. Momentous 18 Dan CA 39. AZ Rev 18 Premier AZ   5-Star Players in the Field: Charlie Fuerbringer S Mizuno Long Beach 18 Rockstar (Wisconsin) Taylor Harvey MB Club V 18 Ren Reed (2025, Texas) Taylor Deckert SCVC 18 Roxy (2025, USC)   4-Star Players in the Field: Janelle Green KC Power 18 Black (Cincinnati) Isabel Clark OH Mizuno Long Beach 18 Rockstar (San Diego) Elina Mortensen OH Club 18 Ren Reed (BYU) Heidi Devers L/DS Dynasty 18 Black (Kansas) Evan Hendrix OH AZ Rev 18 Premier (TCU) Jenna Hanes MB Wave 18 Brennan (Michigan) Amanda Saeger S Wave 18 Brennan (DePaul) Maya Evens L/DS Wave 18 Brennan (2025, Maryland)   Outlook: There are two storylines that stand out this coming weekend. The first is KC Power chasing its third qualifier victory of the season after already earning golds at the KC MLK and Northern Lights events. Winning two qualifiers is already an impressive feat, but winning three is something very few teams ever accomplish in the same season. KC Power also happens to be the only team in the field with a bid and given its success at the past two qualifiers, there is a strong possibility of KC Power factoring into the top three and creating trickle down to fourth place. Teams are working to make one of the two, three-team gold pools on Day 3. If KC Power can finish in the top three – really top four – it will eliminate the pressure of the third-place match and needing to win that to secure the final bid. The other storyline is the amount of teams playing in their first qualifier. We’ve already had six qualifiers but with them mostly in the Midwest or East Coast, it’s kept the So Cal teams away. That changes this weekend when Wave, Long Beach, SCVC, Momentous, SG Elite and Rancho Valley enter the mix. OJVA is also making the trip from Oregon. Then there is the hometown club in Club V’s top 18s team finally playing in its first qualifier as well. Prediction: The pick is for SCVC to beat KC Power in the final and denying KC Power its third qualifier victory. That leaves SCVC with one of the three bids. We aren’t predicting anything too crazy with the last two bids, as Wave and Long Beach finish tied for third and both qualify.

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Salt Lake Showdown: All-Tournament Teams

With our daily Show Stoppers from Days 1, 2 and 3 released plus our Gold Medal Rundown, it’s now time for vballrecruiter.com’s All-Tournament selections from the Salt Lake City Showdown. We spent three days watching the action and made the difficult picks below from the 16 and 17 Open divisions. 17 OPEN OUTSIDES Taylor Williams Vision 17 Gold Paige Bennett NorCal 17-1 Black Halie McGinest Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar Jenna Garner City 17 Gold MIDDLES Sophia Wolfson SG Elite 17 Rosh Madeline Way SG Elite 17 Rosh Havyn Rolle City 17 Gold Tea Bosanac DaKine Warriors 17 Surf RIGHT SIDES Addison Collum Seal Beach 17 Black SETTERS/RIGHT SIDES Kate Duffey City 17 Gold Hannah Byers DaKine Warriors 17 Surf SETTERS Taylor Yu SG Elite 17 Rosh Maya Baker Vision 17 Gold Charlie Fuerbringer Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar LIBEROS/DSs Lauren Lynch SG Elite 17 Rosh Whitney Wallace Vision 17 Gold Kaitlyn Nguyen DaKine Warriors 17 Surf *** 16 OPEN OUTSIDES Ayanna Watson OH Vegas Aces 16 UA Bellamie Beus ID Crush 16 Bower Amina N’diaye OT 16 Roberto Layli Ostovar Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar Kennedi Rogers AVA TX 16 Adidas Lucy Chertock NorCal 16-1 Black MIDDLES Brooklyn Hardy ID Crush 16 Bower Charlotte Kelly NorCal 16 Black Willow Watson Vegas Aces 16 UA Lilliana Montes Temecula Viper 16 Costa RIGHT SIDES Kate Hayhurst ID Crush 16 Bower Sunni Skipps Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar Gia McGrew OK Charge 16 UA SETTERS Tenesyn Frye ID Crush 16 Bower Melanie Hewlett Temecula Viper 16 Costa LIBEROS/DSs Elizabeth Bower ID Crush 16 Bower Emma Ortiz OT 16 Roberto

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Salt Lake Showdown: Day 3 Show Stoppers

When the bids are on the line during the final day of competition, we all know what that does to the intensity and competition. It all rises exponentially with teams knowing they are so close to qualifying. That’s the way it played out on Day 3 of the Salt Lake City Showdown. Below, we highlight the players who stood out the most to us with our Day 3 Show Stoppers. DAY 3 SHOW STOPPERS Bellamie Beus OH ID Crush 16 Bower: Beus and company took home another gold medal by capturing 16 Open. A 4-star recruit from the Class of 2026, she’s a handful at the net with a powerful arm and the way she can move the ball around. Tenesyn Frye S ID Crush 16 Bower: Frye – a 4-star recruit – is a long setter with clean hands and a smooth delivery. She’s accurate too with the ability to spread the ball around and getting everyone involved. Maija Howse OH ID Crush 16 Bower: Howse – a 3-star recruit – was the most consistent attacker on Day 3 as she carried the offense at times. She’s another front row player with height and was scoring with a variety of shots, from tools, to rolls to sending balls straight down. Elizabeth Bower L/DS ID Crush 16 Bower: Bower – a 4-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is a passionate defender who covers a wide range of court. She reads and reacts well and isn’t someone to challenge in serve receive. Brooklyn Hardy MB ID Crush 16 Bower: Hardy – also a 4-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is a wirey middle who moves and jumps well. Defenses need to be ready when ID Crush is in system because she’ll get the ball and is a tough cover. Layli Ostovar OH Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: A 5-star recruit from the Class of 2026, Ostovar is a six-rotation mainstay in the lineup. She has a cannon for an arm and is the go-to hitter who carried the offense in stretches as Beach finished with the silver medal. Lalelei Hall RS Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Hall did a great job on the right side contributing on both sides. She came through with valuable offense and also timely blocks to help boost Beach. Ayva Ostovar S Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Ostovar was another key factor in Beach’s run to the championship match. She did well guiding the attack and putting her hitters in good spots to score. Kayla Ostovar L/DS Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Beach’s defense took a step forward on the final day, with Ostovar part of the overall effort. She did well both covering and defending. Rachel Purser RS Vegas Aces 16 UA: Purser was providing just what Vegas Aces needed on the right side. She was scoring well enough to help open up the attack and she was finding gaps in the block and going for it. She also did well blocking and giving her team points that way too. *** Ayanna Watson OH Vegas Aces 16 UA: Watson – a 5-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – showed why she has such incredible upside. She’s a lanky, high-flying outside who can go over the block and blast balls from corner to corner as well as score at ridiculous angles. Trinity Thompson L/DS Vegas Aces 16 UA: Thompson – part of the Class of 2026 as well – did well in the back row facing off against strong offenses. She held her own with plenty of hustle plays. Amina N’diaye OH OT 16 Roberto: N’diaye – a 5-star recruit – helped OT earn its bid. She’s another long attacker who can hit from a high contact point and make defenses pay with her arm. Kierstin Bevelle OH OT 16 Roberto: Bevelle – a 3-star recruit – is a high-octane outside who brings it on the attack. She was a key cog in OT’s success with her front and back row play. Lucy Chertock OH NorCal 16-1 Black: A 3-star recruit, Chertock was another six-rotation outside who was taking care of business. She was taking big swings at the net in tight situations as NorCal was fighting for its bid. Olivia Guzman RS MVA 16 Pedro: We caught Guzman on MVA’s way to winning 16 Liberty as they competed next to the 17 Open courts. She’s an under-the-radar prospect with nice height and a lively arm. She jumps well and was putting away impressive kills. Taylor Yu S SG Elite 17 Rosh: Yu – a 5-star recruit – led SG to its bid and the silver medal. She’s a smooth-dishing setter who has all the intangibles. She keeps the offense going and does a great job keeping defenses guessing. Lauren Lynch L/DS SG Elite 17 Rosh: A 4-star recruit from the Class of 2025, Lynch owns the back row. She’s a feisty defender who rarely gets served and makes up ground in a hurry when covering. Gabriella Destler OH SG Elite 17 Rosh: Destler – a 3-star recruit – did well in her role as a six-rotation outside. She brought her length to the net and added a different element to the attack as she provided reliable offense. Taylor Williams OH Vision 17 Gold: Williams – a 4-star Duke commit – was an integral piece as Vision added another qualifier victory to its collection. She’s a solid attacker who extends and swings well as she tools and hits around blocks. *** Maya Baker S Vision 17 Gold: A 4-star recruit from the Class of 2025, Baker runs the offense with precision. She’s rarely off target and knows how to keep defenses on their toes with her ability to move the ball around. Erin Curtis OH/RS Vision 17 Gold: Curtis showed her value by playing on both pins this weekend. She spent time on the right on Day 3 while still passing in serve receive and held it down in both roles.

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Salt Lake Showdown: Gold Medal Rundown

Until three weekends ago, a club from Idaho had never captured a gold medal in Open at a national qualifier. ID Crush 16 Bower broke that barrier when it went 9-0 and finished first in 16 Open at the Pacific Northwest Qualifier at the end of March. While the accomplishment was years in the making, it didn’t take nearly that long for ID Crush to repeat the feat after finding itself standing on top of another podium after claiming the 16 Open gold medal Monday at the Salt Lake City Showdown. Most of the drama on the final day of competition in the division centered around ID Crush. As the only team in the field with a bid, ID Crush would greatly impact qualifying. Here’s what was on the line as ID Crush entered its match against NorCal 16-1 Black in its final outing of the three-team pool. First off, the two sides met at PNQ in a three-team gold pool. ID Crush swept NorCal to win the pool before going on to qualify, so there was that recent memory. There were also two other interested parties in their latest clash. ID Crush was 1-0 after beating Vegas Aces 16 UA and would clinch the pool and a spot in the final by beating NorCal or by winning a set. Along with it, both OT 16 Roberto and Vegas Aces would earn bids. Meanwhile, Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar had already clinched its bid by winning its three-team pool and reaching the final, but more on that in a moment. The other scenario was ID Crush losing to NorCal in two – which seemed like a real possibility after NorCal took the first set – and finishing in third place. That would have given Vegas Aces a spot in the final and showdown with Long Beach. It also would have made the third-place match relevant as OT and NorCal would have to square off for the last qualifying spot. It all became clear once ID Crush fought back and captured the second set against NorCal. ID Crush trailed 9-6 in the third before rallying and winning in three, 30-32, 25-17, 15-11. At that stage, OT and Vegas were done for the day, with no need to play the third-place contest and both coming through with bids. ID Crush capped its weekend by sweeping Long Beach, 25-19, 25-13, in the final and finishing 9-0. ID Crush qualified last year as a 15s team and obviously took a big step forward this spring in not only winning one but two national qualifiers. But not only did ID Crush capture two gold medals, it didn’t drop a match at either event. ID Crush started off rocky at PNQ, beating Vision 16 Gold and City 16 Gold in three in its first two matches and then didn’t drop a set the rest of the way. In Salt Lake City, ID Crush dropped a set on Day 1 to Vegas Aces then another set to Vegas Aces in their Day 3 encounter and the one to NorCal. ID Crush also finished tied for fifth at the Red Rock Rave, where it lost to Arizona Storm 16 Thunder in gold pool to miss out on the gold bracket. At No. 29 in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50 National Rankings, ID Crush was the second-highest ranked team in 16 Open, one spot behind No. 28 OT 16 Roberto. OT opened the weekend as the No. 2 team in Pool 2 but took over the No. 2 seed and held it through the start of Monday’s gold pools. It was a rough start, however, as Long Beach swept OT handily to open pool play. Long Beach followed by sweeping Norco 16 Black to clinch the bid outright. It left OT and Norco in a must-win contest, as the only known at that point is finishing in third meant no bid. OT rebounded from earlier and handled business against Norco, sweeping and putting itself in great position to qualify. OT fared well in its first shot at qualifying at the Sunshine Classic. There, OT lost to both Hou Skyline 16 Royal and Legacy 16-1 Adidas to finish tied for fifth. Northern Lights was a different tale, where OT stumbled a bit and finished 11th after going 3-4. OT’s only loss this past weekend was to Long Beach in gold pool play. OT pulled out a pair of tough contests on Day 2, first beating Vegas Aces in three before holding off AVA TX 16 Adidas, 16-25, 25-21, 18-16. Both Vegas Aces and Long Beach came in unranked behind No. 32 AVA and No. 40 NorCal. It could have been lights out for Long Beach on Day 2. The So Cal club finished in a three-way tie at 1-2 with Forza1 16 One and NPJ Salem 16 National and it led to a one-game playoffs after all were equal in set percentage. Long Beach ended up advancing after narrowly downing NPJ, 15-13. There were no such close calls on Day 3, as Long Beach was sharp in pool play and didn’t allow opponents much of an opportunity to apply any pressure of their own. It was a stark contrast to Long Beach’s time in Spokane, where the squad went 2-5 and finished tied for 11th. As for Vegas Aces, it already had secured its USA division bid and took advantage of its time in SLC to upgrade to an Open one. Vegas Aces opened the weekend by pushing ID Crush to three before finishing 2-1 and moving on. Day 2 began with a critical victory over AVA TX. Vegas Aces barely lost to OT in the next outing, falling 15-12 in Game 3, before securing a spot in the gold pool by beating OK Charge 16 UA. Vegas Aces had another shot at ID Crush on Day 3, once again going the distance but not quite able to come out ahead. But Vegas Aces responded with a resounding sweep of NorCal,

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Salt Lake Showdown: Day 2 Show Stoppers And More

While we still don’t know which teams are going home with bids, we definitely know the small group they are going to come from after play concluded on Day 2 of the Salt Lake City Showdown. Gold pool play actually kicked off Sunday night in 17 Open, featuring two, four-team pools. Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar, NorCal 17-1 Black, Vision 17 Gold and City 17 Gold are in Pool 1 together. Pool 2 contains Seal Beach17 Black, SG Elite 17 Rosh, DaKine Warriors 17 Surf and Tx Performance 17s. Only Vision has a bid among them, so trickle down can’t go past fourth place and we know all three bids are going out. Both Long Beach and NorCal prevailed in Pool 1 Sunday evening while Seal Beach and SG Elite started off with big victories in Pool 2. Long Beach topped Vision, which is great for Long Beach but could cause problems for others who are wanting trickle down by Vision finishing in the top four. NorCal started off by beating City. Long Beach and City open against each other Monday morning that is going to set the tone for the rest of the day in that pool. Seal Beach rallied past DaKine Warriors to open Pool 2. Seal Beach let a 24-21 advantage slip away in the opening frame but managed to fight back and win in three. SG Elite swept Tx Performance. The only other team in the 17 Open field with an Open bid at the start of Day 2 was Club V 17 Ren Matthew. However, Club V did not break pool during morning action. A week after winning the Big South Qualifier, Club V lost to both City and Seal Beach and was eliminated in its local qualifier. In 16 Open, the field was trimmed down to six teams. ID Crush 16 Bower, NorCal 16-1 Black and Vegas Aces 16 UA are in Pool 1. In Pool 2, it is OT 16 Roberto, Norco 16 Black and Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar. Only ID Crush has a bid, so like 17 Open, trickle down can only reach fourth place. We also know three of the five remaining teams are going home with bids. Like I keep saying, this is a great weekend for teams to qualify. The craziest action on Day 2 went down in Pool 1, where ID Crush went 3-0 followed by Long Beach, NPJ Salem 16 National and Forza1 16 One all tying at 1-2. All three finished tied in set percentage as well so the only fix was one-game playoffs. NPJ clipped Forza, 19-17, before Long Beach edged NPJ, 15-13. So Long Beach took second and remains alive. It was a strong outing for Vegas Aces, which finished 2-1 in Pool 2 and advanced behind 3-0 OT Roberto. Vegas Aces scored a key victory over AVA TX 16 Adidas to break pool. In Pool 3, Norco 16 Black came out on top at 3-0. Norco beat No. 3 seed NorCal in the 1 v 2 contest. That came after downing both Temecula Viper 16 Costa and Seal Beach 16 Black. DAY 2 SHOW STOPPERS Tenesyn Frye S ID Crush 16 Bower: Frye – a 4-star recruit – helped guide ID Crush to another 3-0 mark to reach the gold pools. Frye has a soft touch and clean release. She locates well and does a nice job moving the ball around. Brooklyn Hardy MB ID Crush 16 Bower: Hardy – a 4-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is a wirey middle with tons of upside. She gets up well and has a great arm and was providing plenty of offense. Kate Hayhurst RS ID Crush 16 Bower: A 3-star recruit, Hayhurst is a long lefty who can play all six rotations. She’s effective at the net attacking with a high contact point and ability to hit with pace. Paige Thies OH NPJ Salem 16 National: Thies – a 3-star recruit – is a physical, hard-hitting outside who was powering balls down with authority. Evie Morrissette S NPJ Salem 16 National: Morrissette did well running the offense. She’s a solid setter with nice location and a consistent release. Emily Forness RS OT 16 Roberto: Forness was giving her team a reliable option on the right side with the way she was swinging and scoring. She was taking strong swings, not holding back and letting it rip. Addison Worley OH OK Charge 16 UA: Worley – who we also wrote about on Day 1 – was back at it. She’s a bit undersized but she’s a gamer who takes big, aggressive swings and doesn’t back down. Avalon Heintz L/DS Temecula Viper 16 Costa: Heintz is a hard-working libero is goes all out. She covers well and makes up lots of ground. Melanie Hewlett S Temecula Viper 16 Costa: Hewlett is a bit undersized at the position but she dishes well. She has a clean release and spots well. Maren O’Farrell L/DS NorCal 16-1 Black: O’Farrell was solid in the back row with her passing and defending. She has a calm demeanor and doesn’t seem to rattle easily. *** Charlotte Kelly MB NorCal 16-1 Black: Kelly – a 3-star recruit – was making her presence felt in the middle. She’s a powerful attacker who can bring the boom. She runs the slide effectively and can send down huge kills off of it. Kennedi Rogers OH AVA TX 16 Adidas: Rogers – a 4-star recruit – was showing off her mighty arm. She takes massive swings front or back row and hammers as hard as anyone in the division. Annabelle DeJager OH Norco 16 Black: DeJager and her Norco teammates had a great day going 3-0. DeJager is a six-rotation outside and played a key role. She has a lively arm and bringing it on the attack. Karsyn Fetzer OH Norco 16 Black: Fetzer delivered in a similar manner as DeJager. She was the other half of the outside duo that was doing

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Salt Lake Showdown: Day 1 Show Stoppers And More

With the Windy City Qualifier the largest event taking place this weekend in sheer numbers and given the fact many of vballrecruiter.com’s top-ranked teams are in Chicago, this year’s version of the Salt Lake City Showdown offers a great opportunity for clubs to punch their tickets to Junior Nationals. Of course, the only way to make that happen is to survive Day 1! While the top seeds did their part and advanced, which unexpected teams kept their dream alive for Day 2? There was a lot of shaking up in 17 Open, where top-seeded Vision 17 Gold lost to Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar. Vision and Club V 17 Ren Matthew are the only qualified teams in the field so there results impact everything. Club V – fresh off winning the Big South Qualifier – was upset by Tx Performance 17-1 though it technically wasn’t an upset. Tx Performance was the No. 1 team in Pool 7, but considering Club V is ranked No. 23 in our Top 50 and just won Big South, that has to be viewed as an upset. NPJ Salem 17 National – the No. 4 team in Pool 2 – moved on with a 2-1 mark, topping both Hive 17 Gold and Norco 17 Black. However, RRHVB 17-1 Robyn had an even better day. RRHVB was also a No. 4 team, but won Pool 6 by going 3-0. The No. 1 team in the pool in Abq Juniors 17-1 finished in a three-way tie at 1-2 and managed to grab second to stay alive. DaKine Warriors 17 Surf went 2-1 and stayed in contention as the No. 3 team in Pool 3. As for 16 Open, NPJ Salem 16 National was one of the lower-seeded teams to rise up and remain in the bid chase. The Oregon club – as the No. 3 team in Pool 4 – was the lowest-seeded team to break ranks and remain in bid contention. NPJ finished in a three-way tie at 1-2 with A4 Volley 16 Cassie and Club V 16 Ren Matt and earned second place based on tiebreakers. Only one other No. 3 team advanced along NPJ. It was Vegas Aces 16 UA. Vegas Aces went 2-1 as the No. 3 team in Pool 1, picking up victories against Tx Performance 16 Black and Elevate Athletics 16 Nike to move on. It wasn’t all easy sailing for the top seeds, however. While ID Crush 16 Bower, NorCal 16-1 Black, Norco 16 Black, AVA TX 16 Adidas and Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar all went undefeated as No. 1 teams in their respective pools on the opening day, No. 2 overall seed Temecula Viper 16 Costa was upended by OT 16 Roberto. This wasn’t a surprise though, as I think it was more mis-seeding than anything else. OT Roberto is actually the highest-ranked team in the field from our Top 50, coming in at No. 28. ID Crush is next at No. 29 and already has a bid. So to me, OT Roberto really should’ve been seeded No. 1 or No. 2 overall anyway. DAY 1 SHOW STOPPERS Sunni Skipps RS Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Skipps was effective at the net and helped boost the attack. She’s a smooth-swinging lefty who generates lots of pace. In addition, the she stayed in across the back row and helped in serve receive. Layli Ostovar OH Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Ostovar – a 5-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is an athletic, quick outside with springs for legs. She elevates well and has a whippy arm that can blast balls all over the court. Anna Rice OH OK Charge 16 UA: Rice is a big-hitting outside who held down the offense across the front row. She used her size to her advantage and either overpowered blockers or went right over them for kills. Gia McGrew RS OK Charge 16 UA: McGrew is a strong, physical hitter who gave her team a reliable right-side option to open the attack. She jumps well and swings hard and made defenses have to pay attention to her. Addison Worley OH OK Charge 16 UA: Worley is a bit undersized on the pin but she doesn’t back down from a challenge. She has a strong arm and was getting after it on the attack and going at defenders. Mylee Blake OH NPJ Salem 16 National: Blake was a consistent scoring option and did well showing a variety of shots. She exploited holes in the block and sent balls down when it was there or went off-speed and found the gaps in the defense. Melissa Jin S NorCal 16-1 Black: Jin sets a consistently clean and accurate ball. She did a great job connecting with both her middles and using her full range of options. Lilliana Montes MB Temecula Viper 16 Costa: Montes – 3-star recruit from the Class of 2024 – is 6-4 and has a huge impact at the net, especially against smaller front-row players. She was owning the net on tight balls and was doing well scoring when set. Ryleigh Short OH Temecula Viper 16 Costa: Short is another outside who is a bit undersized but she has a strong arm and hits hard. She’s also a solid serve, with a really nice hard, flat ball that was eating passers up. Klea Tarja OH Forza1 16 One: Tarja – a 3-star recruit – caught our eye last month in Las Vegas and she was back showing off her arm in Salt Lake. She has a loose swing and can really connect when she catches one. *** Ayanna Watson OH Vegas Aces 16 UA: Watson – a 5-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is a high-flying, hard-hitting outside who can bring the wow factor. The crazy thing is she’s still figuring it all out and has tremendous upside. Macey Smith L/DS Tstreet 16 Naseri: Smith was holding down the back row nicely. She was passing soundly out of

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Salt Lake Showdown: Preview and Predictions (FREE)

The Salt Lake City Showdown made its debut last season in March. This year, the 18s were moved up while the rest of the ages were moved back. Thus, the second go-around featuring 16 and 17 Open are taking place in April on Easter weekend. Below, we take a look at those divisions and guess how they might play out. 17 OPEN Number of Teams: 27 Available Bids: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (2): Vision 17 Gold; Club V 17 Ren Matthew vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (5):   5-Star Athletes to Know:   4-Star Athletes to Know:   Outlook/Prediction: With Club V 17 Ren Matthew winning the Big South Qualifier last weekend, it makes for two qualified teams along with Vision 17 Gold. Both Club V and Vision figure to be in the mix this weekend in terms of contending and creating trickle down possibly. The other team to watch for is SG Elite 17 Rosh. SG tried qualifying at both Red Rock and PNQ and just missed out at both places. This is likely the weekend SG gets it done. Could it be a So Cal sweep when it comes to the bids? City 17 Gold and Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar are the only other ranked teams in the field. But, they are the only ones with a real chance. NorCal 17 Black, Seal Beach 17 Black and A4 Volley 17 Tyler all have great chances to rise up. It’s going to boil down to SG topping Vision in the final. Seal Beach and NorCal get bids along with SG. *** 16 OPEN Number of Teams: 25 Available Bids: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (1): ID Crush 16 Bower vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (4):   5-Star Athletes to Know:   4-Star Athletes to Know:   Outlook/Prediction: With ID Crush 16 Bower the only team with a bid, trickle down can’t reach past fourth place. That’s going to create high drama. OT 16 Roberto is the top favorite in terms of qualifying, followed by AVA TX 16 Adidas and NorCal 16 Black. Temecula Viper 16 Costa was in the mix for a bid at Red Rock and is another team to keep tabs on. Norco 16 Black is seeded No. 4 overall and could be yet another to get its bid. A4 Volley 16 Cassie could be a dark horse. The pick is OT Roberto beating ID Crush in the final, with AVA and NorCal getting bids.

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SLC: Outsides Bringing Heat (Part 1)

We spent three days covering 15-17 Open at the Salt Lake City Showdown. Yes, there was 18 Open too but we focused on the younger age groups because of the 18s qualifier in So Cal this past weekend. Below, we highlight some of the top outsides we saw throughout the course of the weekend. The athletes featured are from what we witnessed with our own eyes and who we thought was performing well at the time we saw them playing. 15 OPEN Teraya Sigler, Outside, AZ Storm 15 Thunder – There’s no doubt that Sigler is someone Storm looks for to carry a good portion of the offensive load. She has nice size and physicality and is an option whether she’s front or back row. She also a key contributor defensively and passes well out of serve receive. Cecilia Vance, Outside, ARVC 15N1 Adidas – Vance is another outside teams must key on wherever she’s at on the court. She gets up in the air nicely for sure and takes aggressive swings at the ball when the set allows it. Neriah Perez, Outside, Club V 15 Ren Adam – Club V came close to upsetting top-seeded Absolute 15 Black in the first match of the weekend with Perez playing a key role. She’s an athletic outside who moves and jumps very well. Megan Fitch, Outside, Alamo 15 Premier – Opponents don’t want to allow Fitch to get going. With her height at the net and fluid swing, she can be a real weapon for Alamo. She also has the capability to get up and hit over the block. Halle Jameson, Outside, Excel 15 National Red – Jameson is another outside we witnessed who is a lengthy outside. She possesses a nice jump and swing which makes her a solid attacker and offensive option. Elena Fisher, Outside, Absolute 15 Black – A bit undersized on the outside, Fisher makes up for it with her springy legs. She gets off the ground quickly. She’ll take aggressive cuts at the ball and she’s the one Absolute looks for when the play breaks down. 16 OPEN Samantha Blackett, Outside, Club V 16 Ren Wayne – Club V has fun pieces to watch and Blackett is one of them. She’s an energetic outside with good height. She’s not afraid to get after it and really goes for it with some aggressive swings. Isabella Blackwell, Outside, Aspire 16 Premier – Blackwell has some grit and determination about her. She’s a bit undersized at outside but she gets off the ground well and takes hard swings. Lauren Harden, Outside, Rev 16-1 Fury – At 6-3, Harden represents problems for defenses. She’s a clear go-to outside with the ability to sway matches to her team’s favor with her wide-range of attacking skills. She’s someone you can just throw a ball up to and let her go to work. Piper Rama, Outside, AZ Storm 16 Thunder – Rama plays like she loves to compete. Somewhat undersized, she plays hard and does some of everything for Storm from not being afraid of going at blocks to hitting the floor in the back court to keep a rally going. Jaidyn Jager, Outside, Coast 16-1 – A freshman playing up, Jager carries a lot of the offensive load and is the one Coast turns to when things break down. Coast will use her a lot on the outside but run the X with her as well. Plus, she’s a solid passer and helps hold down serve receive. Paityn Chapman, Outside, Co Jrs 16-1 Sherri – There a some really good options for Co Jrs and Chapman is one of the team on the left. At 6-3, she’s not even the tallest option for the setters but she helps spread out the attack and put balls down or away. 17 OPEN Evan Hendrix and Kendal Murphy, Outsides, AZ Rev 17 Premier – Revolution isn’t short on offensive options, with Hendrix, a sophomore, and Murphy certainly in the mix as two of them. She’s a bit undersized compared to the others in the lineup but she jumps very well, can score outright or tool blocks and will take swings out of the back row. Murphy, at 6-3 and committed to Baylor, will also hit out of the back row and can score with the best of them tooling blocks or going over smaller blockers. Blaire Bayless, Outside, Madfrog 17 Green – This 6-2 outside committed to Pitt was one of the most impressive outsides in the gym. She’s lanky and can get off the ground, which makes her a very difficult attacker to stop as she can blow up blocks, go around them or over them with her big swings. Ariana Brown, Outside, Asics Willowbrook 17 Gold – Brown brings a lot to the lineup for Willowbrook. She possesses a hammer on offense but she’s also somebody teams shouldn’t serve because she can pass dimes time and time again. Levani Key-Powell and Jordyn Harvey, Outsides, Club V 17 Ren Reed – This outside tandem is fun to watch and bring excitement to spectators with the way they play. Key-Powell is a sophomore playing up and is an explosive hard hitter who plays taller than her 5-9 height. Meanwhile, Harvey can absolutely fly with her springy legs and is a target wherever she’s at on the court.

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SLC: Outsides Bringing Heat (Part 2)

We spent three days covering 15-17 Open at the Salt Lake City Showdown. Yes, there was 18 Open too but we focused on the younger age groups because of the 18s qualifier in So Cal this past weekend. Below, we highlight some of the top outsides we saw throughout the course of the weekend. The athletes featured are from what we witnessed with our own eyes and who we thought was performing well at the time we saw them playing. 15 OPEN Alexandra Richter, Outside, Skyline 15 Royal – A tall, lanky outside, Richter is the go-to option for Skyline. That’s because she’s an effective scorer. Set her high and let her go up and get it, as she’s capable of hitting over blocks. Bellamie Beus, Outside, ID Crush 15 Bower – Beus can bring some power and pop to the Crush attack. When the sets there and she’s able to go after, she’s capable of really connecting. Alyssa Aguayo, Outside, Aspire 15 Premier – A six-rotation option for Aspire, Aguayo gets her share of swings in helping carrying the offensive load. She definitely had some moments taking some nice solid swings. Lily Davis, Outside, Austin Skyline 15 Royal – Davis is a key part of the attack as the go-to on the left. She’s a consistent scorer who can take aggressive swings and will get the ball in the back row as well. Simone Roslon and Kiana Greer, Outsides, Mizuno Long Beach 15 Rockstar – These two outsides for Beach play a similar style. Neither are the biggest, hardest hitters at their position but they are critical to what Beach does. That’s because both are strong passers out of serve receive and smart, heady hitters who don’t try to overdo it. 16 OPEN Denasia Maxey, Outside, Excel 16 National Red – Wherever Maxey is on the court defenses need to be aware. She’s a high-flyer who can put a ball down from anywhere. Maya Witherspoon, Outside, Rockwood Thunder 16 Elite – It was a tough Day 1 for Rockwood, which lost a pair of tight three-set results and didn’t break pool. However, Witherspoon flashed her talent and arm swing and has ton of potential. Brooklyn Tealer, Outside, Gainesville Jrs 16 Black – If you like attackers who get up in the air and let it loose, you’ll love Tealer. She flies, has a big arm and gets set all over making her a definite weapon for Gainesville. Abby McClain, Outside, SIVBC 16 Black – McClain is an instrumental part of the offense for Sudden Impact. She’s tall and a physical hitter who’s more than capable of putting down balls and carrying the load offensively. Brianna Watson, Outside, Madfrog 16 Green – Long and lanky, Watson soars on the attack. She’s still learning and developing obviously but one thing is for sure. You can’t set her high enough and that can make her difficult to defend. Lainee Pyles, Outside, Madfrog 16 Green – Listed as a middle on the roster, Pyles was pushed to the outside because of an injury on the roster. It might be difficult putting her back in the middle as she could stay at outside or even switch to right side. She’s long and posed a legitimate threat on the outside with her ability to score. 17 OPEN Nayeli Gonzalez, Outside, Alamo 17 Premier – The Iowa State commit played a large and important role in helping Alamo qualify over the weekend. Gonzalez seems to play bigger than her listed height of 6-0. She’s a physical attacker who hits with power and defenses don’t have much luck slowing her down. Alexandra Acevedo, Outside, ID Crush 17 Bower – Acevedo plays a big role as a six-rotation outside in Crush’s plan. She’s lengthy and really good offensive player who can score in multiple ways. Torrey Stafford and Drew Wright, Outsides, Sunshine 17 LA – When Stafford is on, watch out. The Pitt commit can soar and hit over blocks with ease, making her a major offensive force for Sunshine. Meanwhile, Sunshine was dealing with some injuries and Wright really stepped up and played solid role, especially with her strong passing skills out of serve receive. Sydney Dunning and Daniela Cranford, Outsides, Co Jrs 17 Kevin – Both outsides proved to be reliable options for Co Jrs throughout the weekend. Dunning, who is committed to Cal State Bakersfield, will get her share of sets and can scoring consistently. Cranford knows how to score off the block well and seems to excel at swinging down the line.

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SLC: Right Sides Out In Force

We spent three days covering 15-17 Open at the Salt Lake City Showdown. Yes, there was 18 Open too but we focused on the younger age groups because of the 18s qualifier coming So Cal this past weekend. Below, we highlight some of the top right sides we saw throughout the course of the weekend. The athletes featured are from what we witnessed with our own eyes and who we thought was performing well at the time we saw them playing. 15 OPEN Addison Gaido, Right Side, Austin Skyline 15 Royal – A good option for Austin Skyline on the right side because Gaido brings height to the front row and can really go at smaller blocks with some strong rips at the ball. Evelyn Potter, Right Side, Flyers 15 APX-John – Flyers isn’t a particularly big team but Potter helps make up for it with her attacking. She’s able to play with physicality and is capable of hitting hard balls when it lines up for her. Raegan Richardson, Right Side, AZ Storm 15 Thunder – Richardson helps balance out the Storm attack when she checks in the front row because Storm will look to get her the ball when in system. She had moments where she had some big swings and loud winners. 16 OPEN Avah Armour, Right Side, Co Jrs 16 Sherri – A junior already committed to Central Florida, at 6-5 Armour is a handful for defenses to figure out and slow down. Co Jrs will line her up at outside or right side and at times can be part of serve receive. Wherever she’s at though Co Jrs is going to get her the ball and let her over and around blocks with her long frame. Jessica Jones, Right Side/Middle, Flyers 16 APX Dylan – There’s a lot to like about Jones and her long presence on the court. She’s a versatile player for Flyers, playing at middle or right side depending on what Flyers wants to do. It really doesn’t matter because she’s effective at any spot with her fluid swing and ability to hit from the left, middle or right and always keeping pressure on the defense. Howdy Hawkins, Right Side, Livewire 16 Adidas – Hawkins can raise some eyebrows when she swings. She carries a lively arm and can crack some balls with she gets a hold of them, including when she’s getting set in the back row. Madison Bland, Right Side, SIVBC 16 Black – Sudden Impact can move Bland around, setting her on the right and on the X in hopes of getting her involved in the offense. The lefty is definitely an option when she’s front row who can provide consistent scoring. Gia McGrew, Right Side, Gainesville Jrs 16 Black – One thing McGrew brings to the lineup is her physicality. Gainesville will get her the ball on the right side and she can take some powerful swings. She’s also able to return the favor with her blocking. 17 OPEN Sarah Wadsworth, Right Side, Arizona Storm 17 Thunder – This 5-11 right side can get up and is an explosive attacker for Storm. Eryn Jones, Right Side, AZ REV 17 Premier – With the firepower at outside, teams can’t forget about Jones on the right. When in system, she helps balance out the attack in a big way. She can get up and hit with power and some of her kills really fire up the team. She also is used in serve receive at times, adding another element to her game. Gabriella Placide, Right Side, Co Jrs 17 Kevin – The more Placide is involved in the offense, the better Co Jrs is playing. At 6-2, she has a big jump to boot and those two things cause lots of problems for the defense when she’s on the attack. Olivia Babcock, Right Side, Sunshine 17 LA – Another Pitt commit who stood out, Babcock has the ability to take over matches at times. She can absolutely blast balls when she’s on and if the block isn’t tall enough there’s not much the defense can do to slow her down. Kierstyn Barton, Right Side, Aspire 17 Premier – Opponents don’t want to let Barton get going. She’s a big swinger and a physical attacker who can unload on her shots, pumping up her teammates when she sends down a ball with authority.

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Salt Lake Showdown 18s: Preview and Predictions

Up next in the 18s qualifying season is the Salt Lake Showdown. A change from the last couple of years is the 18s splitting off into its own weekend instead of being attached with other age groups. Let’s take a look at 18 Open below, where you can see which teams are already qualified, the nationally-ranked teams competing, as well as 4 and 5-star athletes in the mix. SALT LAKE SHOWDOWN 18s  Number of Teams: 24 Number of Bids: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (1): KC Power 18 Black vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (7): 5. KC Power 18 Black KS 11. Wave 18 Brennan CA 13. SCVC 18 Roxy CA 15. Mizuno Long Beach 18 Rockstar CA 23. Club V 18 Ren Reed UT 36. Momentous 18 Dan CA 39. AZ Rev 18 Premier AZ   5-Star Players in the Field: Charlie Fuerbringer S Mizuno Long Beach 18 Rockstar (Wisconsin) Taylor Harvey MB Club V 18 Ren Reed (2025, Texas) Taylor Deckert SCVC 18 Roxy (2025, USC)   4-Star Players in the Field: Janelle Green KC Power 18 Black (Cincinnati) Isabel Clark OH Mizuno Long Beach 18 Rockstar (San Diego) Elina Mortensen OH Club 18 Ren Reed (BYU) Heidi Devers L/DS Dynasty 18 Black (Kansas) Evan Hendrix OH AZ Rev 18 Premier (TCU) Jenna Hanes MB Wave 18 Brennan (Michigan) Amanda Saeger S Wave 18 Brennan (DePaul) Maya Evens L/DS Wave 18 Brennan (2025, Maryland)   Outlook: There are two storylines that stand out this coming weekend. The first is KC Power chasing its third qualifier victory of the season after already earning golds at the KC MLK and Northern Lights events. Winning two qualifiers is already an impressive feat, but winning three is something very few teams ever accomplish in the same season. KC Power also happens to be the only team in the field with a bid and given its success at the past two qualifiers, there is a strong possibility of KC Power factoring into the top three and creating trickle down to fourth place. Teams are working to make one of the two, three-team gold pools on Day 3. If KC Power can finish in the top three – really top four – it will eliminate the pressure of the third-place match and needing to win that to secure the final bid. The other storyline is the amount of teams playing in their first qualifier. We’ve already had six qualifiers but with them mostly in the Midwest or East Coast, it’s kept the So Cal teams away. That changes this weekend when Wave, Long Beach, SCVC, Momentous, SG Elite and Rancho Valley enter the mix. OJVA is also making the trip from Oregon. Then there is the hometown club in Club V’s top 18s team finally playing in its first qualifier as well. Prediction: The pick is for SCVC to beat KC Power in the final and denying KC Power its third qualifier victory. That leaves SCVC with one of the three bids. We aren’t predicting anything too crazy with the last two bids, as Wave and Long Beach finish tied for third and both qualify.

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Salt Lake Showdown: All-Tournament Teams

With our daily Show Stoppers from Days 1, 2 and 3 released plus our Gold Medal Rundown, it’s now time for vballrecruiter.com’s All-Tournament selections from the Salt Lake City Showdown. We spent three days watching the action and made the difficult picks below from the 16 and 17 Open divisions. 17 OPEN OUTSIDES Taylor Williams Vision 17 Gold Paige Bennett NorCal 17-1 Black Halie McGinest Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar Jenna Garner City 17 Gold MIDDLES Sophia Wolfson SG Elite 17 Rosh Madeline Way SG Elite 17 Rosh Havyn Rolle City 17 Gold Tea Bosanac DaKine Warriors 17 Surf RIGHT SIDES Addison Collum Seal Beach 17 Black SETTERS/RIGHT SIDES Kate Duffey City 17 Gold Hannah Byers DaKine Warriors 17 Surf SETTERS Taylor Yu SG Elite 17 Rosh Maya Baker Vision 17 Gold Charlie Fuerbringer Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar LIBEROS/DSs Lauren Lynch SG Elite 17 Rosh Whitney Wallace Vision 17 Gold Kaitlyn Nguyen DaKine Warriors 17 Surf *** 16 OPEN OUTSIDES Ayanna Watson OH Vegas Aces 16 UA Bellamie Beus ID Crush 16 Bower Amina N’diaye OT 16 Roberto Layli Ostovar Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar Kennedi Rogers AVA TX 16 Adidas Lucy Chertock NorCal 16-1 Black MIDDLES Brooklyn Hardy ID Crush 16 Bower Charlotte Kelly NorCal 16 Black Willow Watson Vegas Aces 16 UA Lilliana Montes Temecula Viper 16 Costa RIGHT SIDES Kate Hayhurst ID Crush 16 Bower Sunni Skipps Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar Gia McGrew OK Charge 16 UA SETTERS Tenesyn Frye ID Crush 16 Bower Melanie Hewlett Temecula Viper 16 Costa LIBEROS/DSs Elizabeth Bower ID Crush 16 Bower Emma Ortiz OT 16 Roberto

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Salt Lake Showdown: Day 3 Show Stoppers

When the bids are on the line during the final day of competition, we all know what that does to the intensity and competition. It all rises exponentially with teams knowing they are so close to qualifying. That’s the way it played out on Day 3 of the Salt Lake City Showdown. Below, we highlight the players who stood out the most to us with our Day 3 Show Stoppers. DAY 3 SHOW STOPPERS Bellamie Beus OH ID Crush 16 Bower: Beus and company took home another gold medal by capturing 16 Open. A 4-star recruit from the Class of 2026, she’s a handful at the net with a powerful arm and the way she can move the ball around. Tenesyn Frye S ID Crush 16 Bower: Frye – a 4-star recruit – is a long setter with clean hands and a smooth delivery. She’s accurate too with the ability to spread the ball around and getting everyone involved. Maija Howse OH ID Crush 16 Bower: Howse – a 3-star recruit – was the most consistent attacker on Day 3 as she carried the offense at times. She’s another front row player with height and was scoring with a variety of shots, from tools, to rolls to sending balls straight down. Elizabeth Bower L/DS ID Crush 16 Bower: Bower – a 4-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is a passionate defender who covers a wide range of court. She reads and reacts well and isn’t someone to challenge in serve receive. Brooklyn Hardy MB ID Crush 16 Bower: Hardy – also a 4-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is a wirey middle who moves and jumps well. Defenses need to be ready when ID Crush is in system because she’ll get the ball and is a tough cover. Layli Ostovar OH Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: A 5-star recruit from the Class of 2026, Ostovar is a six-rotation mainstay in the lineup. She has a cannon for an arm and is the go-to hitter who carried the offense in stretches as Beach finished with the silver medal. Lalelei Hall RS Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Hall did a great job on the right side contributing on both sides. She came through with valuable offense and also timely blocks to help boost Beach. Ayva Ostovar S Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Ostovar was another key factor in Beach’s run to the championship match. She did well guiding the attack and putting her hitters in good spots to score. Kayla Ostovar L/DS Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Beach’s defense took a step forward on the final day, with Ostovar part of the overall effort. She did well both covering and defending. Rachel Purser RS Vegas Aces 16 UA: Purser was providing just what Vegas Aces needed on the right side. She was scoring well enough to help open up the attack and she was finding gaps in the block and going for it. She also did well blocking and giving her team points that way too. *** Ayanna Watson OH Vegas Aces 16 UA: Watson – a 5-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – showed why she has such incredible upside. She’s a lanky, high-flying outside who can go over the block and blast balls from corner to corner as well as score at ridiculous angles. Trinity Thompson L/DS Vegas Aces 16 UA: Thompson – part of the Class of 2026 as well – did well in the back row facing off against strong offenses. She held her own with plenty of hustle plays. Amina N’diaye OH OT 16 Roberto: N’diaye – a 5-star recruit – helped OT earn its bid. She’s another long attacker who can hit from a high contact point and make defenses pay with her arm. Kierstin Bevelle OH OT 16 Roberto: Bevelle – a 3-star recruit – is a high-octane outside who brings it on the attack. She was a key cog in OT’s success with her front and back row play. Lucy Chertock OH NorCal 16-1 Black: A 3-star recruit, Chertock was another six-rotation outside who was taking care of business. She was taking big swings at the net in tight situations as NorCal was fighting for its bid. Olivia Guzman RS MVA 16 Pedro: We caught Guzman on MVA’s way to winning 16 Liberty as they competed next to the 17 Open courts. She’s an under-the-radar prospect with nice height and a lively arm. She jumps well and was putting away impressive kills. Taylor Yu S SG Elite 17 Rosh: Yu – a 5-star recruit – led SG to its bid and the silver medal. She’s a smooth-dishing setter who has all the intangibles. She keeps the offense going and does a great job keeping defenses guessing. Lauren Lynch L/DS SG Elite 17 Rosh: A 4-star recruit from the Class of 2025, Lynch owns the back row. She’s a feisty defender who rarely gets served and makes up ground in a hurry when covering. Gabriella Destler OH SG Elite 17 Rosh: Destler – a 3-star recruit – did well in her role as a six-rotation outside. She brought her length to the net and added a different element to the attack as she provided reliable offense. Taylor Williams OH Vision 17 Gold: Williams – a 4-star Duke commit – was an integral piece as Vision added another qualifier victory to its collection. She’s a solid attacker who extends and swings well as she tools and hits around blocks. *** Maya Baker S Vision 17 Gold: A 4-star recruit from the Class of 2025, Baker runs the offense with precision. She’s rarely off target and knows how to keep defenses on their toes with her ability to move the ball around. Erin Curtis OH/RS Vision 17 Gold: Curtis showed her value by playing on both pins this weekend. She spent time on the right on Day 3 while still passing in serve receive and held it down in both roles.

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Salt Lake Showdown: Gold Medal Rundown

Until three weekends ago, a club from Idaho had never captured a gold medal in Open at a national qualifier. ID Crush 16 Bower broke that barrier when it went 9-0 and finished first in 16 Open at the Pacific Northwest Qualifier at the end of March. While the accomplishment was years in the making, it didn’t take nearly that long for ID Crush to repeat the feat after finding itself standing on top of another podium after claiming the 16 Open gold medal Monday at the Salt Lake City Showdown. Most of the drama on the final day of competition in the division centered around ID Crush. As the only team in the field with a bid, ID Crush would greatly impact qualifying. Here’s what was on the line as ID Crush entered its match against NorCal 16-1 Black in its final outing of the three-team pool. First off, the two sides met at PNQ in a three-team gold pool. ID Crush swept NorCal to win the pool before going on to qualify, so there was that recent memory. There were also two other interested parties in their latest clash. ID Crush was 1-0 after beating Vegas Aces 16 UA and would clinch the pool and a spot in the final by beating NorCal or by winning a set. Along with it, both OT 16 Roberto and Vegas Aces would earn bids. Meanwhile, Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar had already clinched its bid by winning its three-team pool and reaching the final, but more on that in a moment. The other scenario was ID Crush losing to NorCal in two – which seemed like a real possibility after NorCal took the first set – and finishing in third place. That would have given Vegas Aces a spot in the final and showdown with Long Beach. It also would have made the third-place match relevant as OT and NorCal would have to square off for the last qualifying spot. It all became clear once ID Crush fought back and captured the second set against NorCal. ID Crush trailed 9-6 in the third before rallying and winning in three, 30-32, 25-17, 15-11. At that stage, OT and Vegas were done for the day, with no need to play the third-place contest and both coming through with bids. ID Crush capped its weekend by sweeping Long Beach, 25-19, 25-13, in the final and finishing 9-0. ID Crush qualified last year as a 15s team and obviously took a big step forward this spring in not only winning one but two national qualifiers. But not only did ID Crush capture two gold medals, it didn’t drop a match at either event. ID Crush started off rocky at PNQ, beating Vision 16 Gold and City 16 Gold in three in its first two matches and then didn’t drop a set the rest of the way. In Salt Lake City, ID Crush dropped a set on Day 1 to Vegas Aces then another set to Vegas Aces in their Day 3 encounter and the one to NorCal. ID Crush also finished tied for fifth at the Red Rock Rave, where it lost to Arizona Storm 16 Thunder in gold pool to miss out on the gold bracket. At No. 29 in vballrecruiter.com’s Top 50 National Rankings, ID Crush was the second-highest ranked team in 16 Open, one spot behind No. 28 OT 16 Roberto. OT opened the weekend as the No. 2 team in Pool 2 but took over the No. 2 seed and held it through the start of Monday’s gold pools. It was a rough start, however, as Long Beach swept OT handily to open pool play. Long Beach followed by sweeping Norco 16 Black to clinch the bid outright. It left OT and Norco in a must-win contest, as the only known at that point is finishing in third meant no bid. OT rebounded from earlier and handled business against Norco, sweeping and putting itself in great position to qualify. OT fared well in its first shot at qualifying at the Sunshine Classic. There, OT lost to both Hou Skyline 16 Royal and Legacy 16-1 Adidas to finish tied for fifth. Northern Lights was a different tale, where OT stumbled a bit and finished 11th after going 3-4. OT’s only loss this past weekend was to Long Beach in gold pool play. OT pulled out a pair of tough contests on Day 2, first beating Vegas Aces in three before holding off AVA TX 16 Adidas, 16-25, 25-21, 18-16. Both Vegas Aces and Long Beach came in unranked behind No. 32 AVA and No. 40 NorCal. It could have been lights out for Long Beach on Day 2. The So Cal club finished in a three-way tie at 1-2 with Forza1 16 One and NPJ Salem 16 National and it led to a one-game playoffs after all were equal in set percentage. Long Beach ended up advancing after narrowly downing NPJ, 15-13. There were no such close calls on Day 3, as Long Beach was sharp in pool play and didn’t allow opponents much of an opportunity to apply any pressure of their own. It was a stark contrast to Long Beach’s time in Spokane, where the squad went 2-5 and finished tied for 11th. As for Vegas Aces, it already had secured its USA division bid and took advantage of its time in SLC to upgrade to an Open one. Vegas Aces opened the weekend by pushing ID Crush to three before finishing 2-1 and moving on. Day 2 began with a critical victory over AVA TX. Vegas Aces barely lost to OT in the next outing, falling 15-12 in Game 3, before securing a spot in the gold pool by beating OK Charge 16 UA. Vegas Aces had another shot at ID Crush on Day 3, once again going the distance but not quite able to come out ahead. But Vegas Aces responded with a resounding sweep of NorCal,

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Salt Lake Showdown: Day 2 Show Stoppers And More

While we still don’t know which teams are going home with bids, we definitely know the small group they are going to come from after play concluded on Day 2 of the Salt Lake City Showdown. Gold pool play actually kicked off Sunday night in 17 Open, featuring two, four-team pools. Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar, NorCal 17-1 Black, Vision 17 Gold and City 17 Gold are in Pool 1 together. Pool 2 contains Seal Beach17 Black, SG Elite 17 Rosh, DaKine Warriors 17 Surf and Tx Performance 17s. Only Vision has a bid among them, so trickle down can’t go past fourth place and we know all three bids are going out. Both Long Beach and NorCal prevailed in Pool 1 Sunday evening while Seal Beach and SG Elite started off with big victories in Pool 2. Long Beach topped Vision, which is great for Long Beach but could cause problems for others who are wanting trickle down by Vision finishing in the top four. NorCal started off by beating City. Long Beach and City open against each other Monday morning that is going to set the tone for the rest of the day in that pool. Seal Beach rallied past DaKine Warriors to open Pool 2. Seal Beach let a 24-21 advantage slip away in the opening frame but managed to fight back and win in three. SG Elite swept Tx Performance. The only other team in the 17 Open field with an Open bid at the start of Day 2 was Club V 17 Ren Matthew. However, Club V did not break pool during morning action. A week after winning the Big South Qualifier, Club V lost to both City and Seal Beach and was eliminated in its local qualifier. In 16 Open, the field was trimmed down to six teams. ID Crush 16 Bower, NorCal 16-1 Black and Vegas Aces 16 UA are in Pool 1. In Pool 2, it is OT 16 Roberto, Norco 16 Black and Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar. Only ID Crush has a bid, so like 17 Open, trickle down can only reach fourth place. We also know three of the five remaining teams are going home with bids. Like I keep saying, this is a great weekend for teams to qualify. The craziest action on Day 2 went down in Pool 1, where ID Crush went 3-0 followed by Long Beach, NPJ Salem 16 National and Forza1 16 One all tying at 1-2. All three finished tied in set percentage as well so the only fix was one-game playoffs. NPJ clipped Forza, 19-17, before Long Beach edged NPJ, 15-13. So Long Beach took second and remains alive. It was a strong outing for Vegas Aces, which finished 2-1 in Pool 2 and advanced behind 3-0 OT Roberto. Vegas Aces scored a key victory over AVA TX 16 Adidas to break pool. In Pool 3, Norco 16 Black came out on top at 3-0. Norco beat No. 3 seed NorCal in the 1 v 2 contest. That came after downing both Temecula Viper 16 Costa and Seal Beach 16 Black. DAY 2 SHOW STOPPERS Tenesyn Frye S ID Crush 16 Bower: Frye – a 4-star recruit – helped guide ID Crush to another 3-0 mark to reach the gold pools. Frye has a soft touch and clean release. She locates well and does a nice job moving the ball around. Brooklyn Hardy MB ID Crush 16 Bower: Hardy – a 4-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is a wirey middle with tons of upside. She gets up well and has a great arm and was providing plenty of offense. Kate Hayhurst RS ID Crush 16 Bower: A 3-star recruit, Hayhurst is a long lefty who can play all six rotations. She’s effective at the net attacking with a high contact point and ability to hit with pace. Paige Thies OH NPJ Salem 16 National: Thies – a 3-star recruit – is a physical, hard-hitting outside who was powering balls down with authority. Evie Morrissette S NPJ Salem 16 National: Morrissette did well running the offense. She’s a solid setter with nice location and a consistent release. Emily Forness RS OT 16 Roberto: Forness was giving her team a reliable option on the right side with the way she was swinging and scoring. She was taking strong swings, not holding back and letting it rip. Addison Worley OH OK Charge 16 UA: Worley – who we also wrote about on Day 1 – was back at it. She’s a bit undersized but she’s a gamer who takes big, aggressive swings and doesn’t back down. Avalon Heintz L/DS Temecula Viper 16 Costa: Heintz is a hard-working libero is goes all out. She covers well and makes up lots of ground. Melanie Hewlett S Temecula Viper 16 Costa: Hewlett is a bit undersized at the position but she dishes well. She has a clean release and spots well. Maren O’Farrell L/DS NorCal 16-1 Black: O’Farrell was solid in the back row with her passing and defending. She has a calm demeanor and doesn’t seem to rattle easily. *** Charlotte Kelly MB NorCal 16-1 Black: Kelly – a 3-star recruit – was making her presence felt in the middle. She’s a powerful attacker who can bring the boom. She runs the slide effectively and can send down huge kills off of it. Kennedi Rogers OH AVA TX 16 Adidas: Rogers – a 4-star recruit – was showing off her mighty arm. She takes massive swings front or back row and hammers as hard as anyone in the division. Annabelle DeJager OH Norco 16 Black: DeJager and her Norco teammates had a great day going 3-0. DeJager is a six-rotation outside and played a key role. She has a lively arm and bringing it on the attack. Karsyn Fetzer OH Norco 16 Black: Fetzer delivered in a similar manner as DeJager. She was the other half of the outside duo that was doing

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Salt Lake Showdown: Day 1 Show Stoppers And More

With the Windy City Qualifier the largest event taking place this weekend in sheer numbers and given the fact many of vballrecruiter.com’s top-ranked teams are in Chicago, this year’s version of the Salt Lake City Showdown offers a great opportunity for clubs to punch their tickets to Junior Nationals. Of course, the only way to make that happen is to survive Day 1! While the top seeds did their part and advanced, which unexpected teams kept their dream alive for Day 2? There was a lot of shaking up in 17 Open, where top-seeded Vision 17 Gold lost to Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar. Vision and Club V 17 Ren Matthew are the only qualified teams in the field so there results impact everything. Club V – fresh off winning the Big South Qualifier – was upset by Tx Performance 17-1 though it technically wasn’t an upset. Tx Performance was the No. 1 team in Pool 7, but considering Club V is ranked No. 23 in our Top 50 and just won Big South, that has to be viewed as an upset. NPJ Salem 17 National – the No. 4 team in Pool 2 – moved on with a 2-1 mark, topping both Hive 17 Gold and Norco 17 Black. However, RRHVB 17-1 Robyn had an even better day. RRHVB was also a No. 4 team, but won Pool 6 by going 3-0. The No. 1 team in the pool in Abq Juniors 17-1 finished in a three-way tie at 1-2 and managed to grab second to stay alive. DaKine Warriors 17 Surf went 2-1 and stayed in contention as the No. 3 team in Pool 3. As for 16 Open, NPJ Salem 16 National was one of the lower-seeded teams to rise up and remain in the bid chase. The Oregon club – as the No. 3 team in Pool 4 – was the lowest-seeded team to break ranks and remain in bid contention. NPJ finished in a three-way tie at 1-2 with A4 Volley 16 Cassie and Club V 16 Ren Matt and earned second place based on tiebreakers. Only one other No. 3 team advanced along NPJ. It was Vegas Aces 16 UA. Vegas Aces went 2-1 as the No. 3 team in Pool 1, picking up victories against Tx Performance 16 Black and Elevate Athletics 16 Nike to move on. It wasn’t all easy sailing for the top seeds, however. While ID Crush 16 Bower, NorCal 16-1 Black, Norco 16 Black, AVA TX 16 Adidas and Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar all went undefeated as No. 1 teams in their respective pools on the opening day, No. 2 overall seed Temecula Viper 16 Costa was upended by OT 16 Roberto. This wasn’t a surprise though, as I think it was more mis-seeding than anything else. OT Roberto is actually the highest-ranked team in the field from our Top 50, coming in at No. 28. ID Crush is next at No. 29 and already has a bid. So to me, OT Roberto really should’ve been seeded No. 1 or No. 2 overall anyway. DAY 1 SHOW STOPPERS Sunni Skipps RS Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Skipps was effective at the net and helped boost the attack. She’s a smooth-swinging lefty who generates lots of pace. In addition, the she stayed in across the back row and helped in serve receive. Layli Ostovar OH Mizuno Long Beach 16 Rockstar: Ostovar – a 5-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is an athletic, quick outside with springs for legs. She elevates well and has a whippy arm that can blast balls all over the court. Anna Rice OH OK Charge 16 UA: Rice is a big-hitting outside who held down the offense across the front row. She used her size to her advantage and either overpowered blockers or went right over them for kills. Gia McGrew RS OK Charge 16 UA: McGrew is a strong, physical hitter who gave her team a reliable right-side option to open the attack. She jumps well and swings hard and made defenses have to pay attention to her. Addison Worley OH OK Charge 16 UA: Worley is a bit undersized on the pin but she doesn’t back down from a challenge. She has a strong arm and was getting after it on the attack and going at defenders. Mylee Blake OH NPJ Salem 16 National: Blake was a consistent scoring option and did well showing a variety of shots. She exploited holes in the block and sent balls down when it was there or went off-speed and found the gaps in the defense. Melissa Jin S NorCal 16-1 Black: Jin sets a consistently clean and accurate ball. She did a great job connecting with both her middles and using her full range of options. Lilliana Montes MB Temecula Viper 16 Costa: Montes – 3-star recruit from the Class of 2024 – is 6-4 and has a huge impact at the net, especially against smaller front-row players. She was owning the net on tight balls and was doing well scoring when set. Ryleigh Short OH Temecula Viper 16 Costa: Short is another outside who is a bit undersized but she has a strong arm and hits hard. She’s also a solid serve, with a really nice hard, flat ball that was eating passers up. Klea Tarja OH Forza1 16 One: Tarja – a 3-star recruit – caught our eye last month in Las Vegas and she was back showing off her arm in Salt Lake. She has a loose swing and can really connect when she catches one. *** Ayanna Watson OH Vegas Aces 16 UA: Watson – a 5-star recruit from the Class of 2026 – is a high-flying, hard-hitting outside who can bring the wow factor. The crazy thing is she’s still figuring it all out and has tremendous upside. Macey Smith L/DS Tstreet 16 Naseri: Smith was holding down the back row nicely. She was passing soundly out of

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Salt Lake Showdown: Preview and Predictions (FREE)

The Salt Lake City Showdown made its debut last season in March. This year, the 18s were moved up while the rest of the ages were moved back. Thus, the second go-around featuring 16 and 17 Open are taking place in April on Easter weekend. Below, we take a look at those divisions and guess how they might play out. 17 OPEN Number of Teams: 27 Available Bids: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (2): Vision 17 Gold; Club V 17 Ren Matthew vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (5):   5-Star Athletes to Know:   4-Star Athletes to Know:   Outlook/Prediction: With Club V 17 Ren Matthew winning the Big South Qualifier last weekend, it makes for two qualified teams along with Vision 17 Gold. Both Club V and Vision figure to be in the mix this weekend in terms of contending and creating trickle down possibly. The other team to watch for is SG Elite 17 Rosh. SG tried qualifying at both Red Rock and PNQ and just missed out at both places. This is likely the weekend SG gets it done. Could it be a So Cal sweep when it comes to the bids? City 17 Gold and Mizuno Long Beach 17 Rockstar are the only other ranked teams in the field. But, they are the only ones with a real chance. NorCal 17 Black, Seal Beach 17 Black and A4 Volley 17 Tyler all have great chances to rise up. It’s going to boil down to SG topping Vision in the final. Seal Beach and NorCal get bids along with SG. *** 16 OPEN Number of Teams: 25 Available Bids: 3 Previously-Qualified Teams (1): ID Crush 16 Bower vballrecruiter.com Nationally-Ranked Teams (4):   5-Star Athletes to Know:   4-Star Athletes to Know:   Outlook/Prediction: With ID Crush 16 Bower the only team with a bid, trickle down can’t reach past fourth place. That’s going to create high drama. OT 16 Roberto is the top favorite in terms of qualifying, followed by AVA TX 16 Adidas and NorCal 16 Black. Temecula Viper 16 Costa was in the mix for a bid at Red Rock and is another team to keep tabs on. Norco 16 Black is seeded No. 4 overall and could be yet another to get its bid. A4 Volley 16 Cassie could be a dark horse. The pick is OT Roberto beating ID Crush in the final, with AVA and NorCal getting bids.

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SLC: Outsides Bringing Heat (Part 1)

We spent three days covering 15-17 Open at the Salt Lake City Showdown. Yes, there was 18 Open too but we focused on the younger age groups because of the 18s qualifier in So Cal this past weekend. Below, we highlight some of the top outsides we saw throughout the course of the weekend. The athletes featured are from what we witnessed with our own eyes and who we thought was performing well at the time we saw them playing. 15 OPEN Teraya Sigler, Outside, AZ Storm 15 Thunder – There’s no doubt that Sigler is someone Storm looks for to carry a good portion of the offensive load. She has nice size and physicality and is an option whether she’s front or back row. She also a key contributor defensively and passes well out of serve receive. Cecilia Vance, Outside, ARVC 15N1 Adidas – Vance is another outside teams must key on wherever she’s at on the court. She gets up in the air nicely for sure and takes aggressive swings at the ball when the set allows it. Neriah Perez, Outside, Club V 15 Ren Adam – Club V came close to upsetting top-seeded Absolute 15 Black in the first match of the weekend with Perez playing a key role. She’s an athletic outside who moves and jumps very well. Megan Fitch, Outside, Alamo 15 Premier – Opponents don’t want to allow Fitch to get going. With her height at the net and fluid swing, she can be a real weapon for Alamo. She also has the capability to get up and hit over the block. Halle Jameson, Outside, Excel 15 National Red – Jameson is another outside we witnessed who is a lengthy outside. She possesses a nice jump and swing which makes her a solid attacker and offensive option. Elena Fisher, Outside, Absolute 15 Black – A bit undersized on the outside, Fisher makes up for it with her springy legs. She gets off the ground quickly. She’ll take aggressive cuts at the ball and she’s the one Absolute looks for when the play breaks down. 16 OPEN Samantha Blackett, Outside, Club V 16 Ren Wayne – Club V has fun pieces to watch and Blackett is one of them. She’s an energetic outside with good height. She’s not afraid to get after it and really goes for it with some aggressive swings. Isabella Blackwell, Outside, Aspire 16 Premier – Blackwell has some grit and determination about her. She’s a bit undersized at outside but she gets off the ground well and takes hard swings. Lauren Harden, Outside, Rev 16-1 Fury – At 6-3, Harden represents problems for defenses. She’s a clear go-to outside with the ability to sway matches to her team’s favor with her wide-range of attacking skills. She’s someone you can just throw a ball up to and let her go to work. Piper Rama, Outside, AZ Storm 16 Thunder – Rama plays like she loves to compete. Somewhat undersized, she plays hard and does some of everything for Storm from not being afraid of going at blocks to hitting the floor in the back court to keep a rally going. Jaidyn Jager, Outside, Coast 16-1 – A freshman playing up, Jager carries a lot of the offensive load and is the one Coast turns to when things break down. Coast will use her a lot on the outside but run the X with her as well. Plus, she’s a solid passer and helps hold down serve receive. Paityn Chapman, Outside, Co Jrs 16-1 Sherri – There a some really good options for Co Jrs and Chapman is one of the team on the left. At 6-3, she’s not even the tallest option for the setters but she helps spread out the attack and put balls down or away. 17 OPEN Evan Hendrix and Kendal Murphy, Outsides, AZ Rev 17 Premier – Revolution isn’t short on offensive options, with Hendrix, a sophomore, and Murphy certainly in the mix as two of them. She’s a bit undersized compared to the others in the lineup but she jumps very well, can score outright or tool blocks and will take swings out of the back row. Murphy, at 6-3 and committed to Baylor, will also hit out of the back row and can score with the best of them tooling blocks or going over smaller blockers. Blaire Bayless, Outside, Madfrog 17 Green – This 6-2 outside committed to Pitt was one of the most impressive outsides in the gym. She’s lanky and can get off the ground, which makes her a very difficult attacker to stop as she can blow up blocks, go around them or over them with her big swings. Ariana Brown, Outside, Asics Willowbrook 17 Gold – Brown brings a lot to the lineup for Willowbrook. She possesses a hammer on offense but she’s also somebody teams shouldn’t serve because she can pass dimes time and time again. Levani Key-Powell and Jordyn Harvey, Outsides, Club V 17 Ren Reed – This outside tandem is fun to watch and bring excitement to spectators with the way they play. Key-Powell is a sophomore playing up and is an explosive hard hitter who plays taller than her 5-9 height. Meanwhile, Harvey can absolutely fly with her springy legs and is a target wherever she’s at on the court.

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SLC: Outsides Bringing Heat (Part 2)

We spent three days covering 15-17 Open at the Salt Lake City Showdown. Yes, there was 18 Open too but we focused on the younger age groups because of the 18s qualifier in So Cal this past weekend. Below, we highlight some of the top outsides we saw throughout the course of the weekend. The athletes featured are from what we witnessed with our own eyes and who we thought was performing well at the time we saw them playing. 15 OPEN Alexandra Richter, Outside, Skyline 15 Royal – A tall, lanky outside, Richter is the go-to option for Skyline. That’s because she’s an effective scorer. Set her high and let her go up and get it, as she’s capable of hitting over blocks. Bellamie Beus, Outside, ID Crush 15 Bower – Beus can bring some power and pop to the Crush attack. When the sets there and she’s able to go after, she’s capable of really connecting. Alyssa Aguayo, Outside, Aspire 15 Premier – A six-rotation option for Aspire, Aguayo gets her share of swings in helping carrying the offensive load. She definitely had some moments taking some nice solid swings. Lily Davis, Outside, Austin Skyline 15 Royal – Davis is a key part of the attack as the go-to on the left. She’s a consistent scorer who can take aggressive swings and will get the ball in the back row as well. Simone Roslon and Kiana Greer, Outsides, Mizuno Long Beach 15 Rockstar – These two outsides for Beach play a similar style. Neither are the biggest, hardest hitters at their position but they are critical to what Beach does. That’s because both are strong passers out of serve receive and smart, heady hitters who don’t try to overdo it. 16 OPEN Denasia Maxey, Outside, Excel 16 National Red – Wherever Maxey is on the court defenses need to be aware. She’s a high-flyer who can put a ball down from anywhere. Maya Witherspoon, Outside, Rockwood Thunder 16 Elite – It was a tough Day 1 for Rockwood, which lost a pair of tight three-set results and didn’t break pool. However, Witherspoon flashed her talent and arm swing and has ton of potential. Brooklyn Tealer, Outside, Gainesville Jrs 16 Black – If you like attackers who get up in the air and let it loose, you’ll love Tealer. She flies, has a big arm and gets set all over making her a definite weapon for Gainesville. Abby McClain, Outside, SIVBC 16 Black – McClain is an instrumental part of the offense for Sudden Impact. She’s tall and a physical hitter who’s more than capable of putting down balls and carrying the load offensively. Brianna Watson, Outside, Madfrog 16 Green – Long and lanky, Watson soars on the attack. She’s still learning and developing obviously but one thing is for sure. You can’t set her high enough and that can make her difficult to defend. Lainee Pyles, Outside, Madfrog 16 Green – Listed as a middle on the roster, Pyles was pushed to the outside because of an injury on the roster. It might be difficult putting her back in the middle as she could stay at outside or even switch to right side. She’s long and posed a legitimate threat on the outside with her ability to score. 17 OPEN Nayeli Gonzalez, Outside, Alamo 17 Premier – The Iowa State commit played a large and important role in helping Alamo qualify over the weekend. Gonzalez seems to play bigger than her listed height of 6-0. She’s a physical attacker who hits with power and defenses don’t have much luck slowing her down. Alexandra Acevedo, Outside, ID Crush 17 Bower – Acevedo plays a big role as a six-rotation outside in Crush’s plan. She’s lengthy and really good offensive player who can score in multiple ways. Torrey Stafford and Drew Wright, Outsides, Sunshine 17 LA – When Stafford is on, watch out. The Pitt commit can soar and hit over blocks with ease, making her a major offensive force for Sunshine. Meanwhile, Sunshine was dealing with some injuries and Wright really stepped up and played solid role, especially with her strong passing skills out of serve receive. Sydney Dunning and Daniela Cranford, Outsides, Co Jrs 17 Kevin – Both outsides proved to be reliable options for Co Jrs throughout the weekend. Dunning, who is committed to Cal State Bakersfield, will get her share of sets and can scoring consistently. Cranford knows how to score off the block well and seems to excel at swinging down the line.

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SLC: Right Sides Out In Force

We spent three days covering 15-17 Open at the Salt Lake City Showdown. Yes, there was 18 Open too but we focused on the younger age groups because of the 18s qualifier coming So Cal this past weekend. Below, we highlight some of the top right sides we saw throughout the course of the weekend. The athletes featured are from what we witnessed with our own eyes and who we thought was performing well at the time we saw them playing. 15 OPEN Addison Gaido, Right Side, Austin Skyline 15 Royal – A good option for Austin Skyline on the right side because Gaido brings height to the front row and can really go at smaller blocks with some strong rips at the ball. Evelyn Potter, Right Side, Flyers 15 APX-John – Flyers isn’t a particularly big team but Potter helps make up for it with her attacking. She’s able to play with physicality and is capable of hitting hard balls when it lines up for her. Raegan Richardson, Right Side, AZ Storm 15 Thunder – Richardson helps balance out the Storm attack when she checks in the front row because Storm will look to get her the ball when in system. She had moments where she had some big swings and loud winners. 16 OPEN Avah Armour, Right Side, Co Jrs 16 Sherri – A junior already committed to Central Florida, at 6-5 Armour is a handful for defenses to figure out and slow down. Co Jrs will line her up at outside or right side and at times can be part of serve receive. Wherever she’s at though Co Jrs is going to get her the ball and let her over and around blocks with her long frame. Jessica Jones, Right Side/Middle, Flyers 16 APX Dylan – There’s a lot to like about Jones and her long presence on the court. She’s a versatile player for Flyers, playing at middle or right side depending on what Flyers wants to do. It really doesn’t matter because she’s effective at any spot with her fluid swing and ability to hit from the left, middle or right and always keeping pressure on the defense. Howdy Hawkins, Right Side, Livewire 16 Adidas – Hawkins can raise some eyebrows when she swings. She carries a lively arm and can crack some balls with she gets a hold of them, including when she’s getting set in the back row. Madison Bland, Right Side, SIVBC 16 Black – Sudden Impact can move Bland around, setting her on the right and on the X in hopes of getting her involved in the offense. The lefty is definitely an option when she’s front row who can provide consistent scoring. Gia McGrew, Right Side, Gainesville Jrs 16 Black – One thing McGrew brings to the lineup is her physicality. Gainesville will get her the ball on the right side and she can take some powerful swings. She’s also able to return the favor with her blocking. 17 OPEN Sarah Wadsworth, Right Side, Arizona Storm 17 Thunder – This 5-11 right side can get up and is an explosive attacker for Storm. Eryn Jones, Right Side, AZ REV 17 Premier – With the firepower at outside, teams can’t forget about Jones on the right. When in system, she helps balance out the attack in a big way. She can get up and hit with power and some of her kills really fire up the team. She also is used in serve receive at times, adding another element to her game. Gabriella Placide, Right Side, Co Jrs 17 Kevin – The more Placide is involved in the offense, the better Co Jrs is playing. At 6-2, she has a big jump to boot and those two things cause lots of problems for the defense when she’s on the attack. Olivia Babcock, Right Side, Sunshine 17 LA – Another Pitt commit who stood out, Babcock has the ability to take over matches at times. She can absolutely blast balls when she’s on and if the block isn’t tall enough there’s not much the defense can do to slow her down. Kierstyn Barton, Right Side, Aspire 17 Premier – Opponents don’t want to let Barton get going. She’s a big swinger and a physical attacker who can unload on her shots, pumping up her teammates when she sends down a ball with authority.

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