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Westlake
Back "On Our Game" With Pearland Title
By Steven
Thomson
©2003 LoneStarVolleyball.com
Austin Westlake continued
its dominance of Texas high school volleyball by defeating Arlington Martin
25-13, 25-23, 25-13 in the finals of the 42-team Katrinka Jo Crawford
Invitational tournament hosted by Pearland High School over the weekend.
The second meeting of the season matching two of the state's most prestigious
high school programs lacked the competitiveness and skill level of their
initial 2003 contest in the finals of the Duncanville tournament two weeks
ago. Martin looked flat and offered no resistance to Westlake's furious
attack.
"That was the best we've played all season," Westlake coach
Al Bennett said. "We were on our game."
Martin was coming off an emotional 25-19, 26-24 win over Stratford in
the semifinals. The hotly contested match provided the Warriors a bit
of payback for last year's loss to the Spartans in the state 5A semifinals.
There was little that Martin did not do right against Stratford. At the
same time, it appeared to take all the emotion out of the Warriors.
"We couldn't get back up after the Stratford match," Martin
coach Joni McCoy said. "Revenge (for last year's semifinal loss)
shouldn't be a factor. That was last year. This is this year."
Westlake had more trouble in its 25-20, 25-19 semifinal victory over a
very scrappy Dulles team. The Vikings had posted back-to-back upsets of
Cypress Creek and Clear Creek the day before.
Dulles could not match Westlake's power at the net, but gave the Chaps
fits with its scrappy defense. Bennett relied on his depth in the second
game, making a number of substitutions that kept the Chaps rolling.
Led by the precise setting of tournament most valuable player Meghan Kainz,
Westlake became an offensive machine in the finals. Most valuable hitter
Lindsey Louis and middle Shannon Davis were virtually unstoppable.
Martin's victory over Stratford denied the Spartans a chance to avenge
last year's loss to Westlake in the 5A state championship match.
"I think Martin outplayed us at the net," Stratford coach Becky
Palermo said. "They terminated the ball better than we did, they
made us fairly predictable, they served real tough and we hit a lot of
balls into the block."
The third-place match saw Stratford take out Dulles 25-14, 25-19, 21-25,
25-12.
The Vikings were not able to regain the level of play they displayed in
the previous matches. The Spartans got consistently good play from tournament
most valuable setter Michelle Moriarty and fellow all-tournament choices
Melissa Caldwell and Anna Shlimak.
"We had a tough time with their jump serves," Dulles coach Alice
Fortes said. "We were sending a lot of easy balls over. They had
Michelle in there and she was running that offense. We were playing defense
a lot and couldn't generate any offense."
One constant was the exceptional play on defense displayed by Dulles throughout
the three-day event. Senior Laura North was a deserving recipient of the
tournament's most valuable defensive specialist award.
"I was very proud of our defense," Fortes said. "Laura
has such heart and determination. She is one of our team captains and
has led this team for three years."
Friendswood made one of the best turnarounds in the tournament. After
struggling in their first two matches, including a dismal second-round
loss to Stratford, the 4A Mustangs bounced back to win the consolation
title with an 18-25, 28-26, 25-13, 25-21 win over 5A power Cinco Ranch.
It was the third successive outstanding effort for Friendswood, which
reached the consolation finals with victories over Elkins, Deer Park and
San Antonio O'Connor.
Cypress Creek captured fifth place by beating Tomball 18-25, 25-19, 25-17.
The scheduled best-of-five match was shortened due to the fact that the
two teams had played each other the night before in a bitterly fought
District 16-5A match. Cypress Creek also won that two-hour match in five
games.
O'Connor claimed the Silver Division title with a 20-25, 25-21, 25-23
win over New Braunfels.
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