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Anonymous | Posted: 2 Dec 2007 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Anonymous

Upset Sends BYU Into Round of 16

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SEATTLE -- For the first time since 2000, the BYU women's volleyball team is headed to the NCAA Tournament Regional Semifinals after a stunning five-game upset of No. 6 Washington on Saturday. The 30-28, 28-30, 25-30, 30-22, 15-13 Cougar win was just the second loss of the year for the Huskies on their home floor as Washington became the highest-seeded team to lose in this year's tournament.

"Beating Washington at home is a tremendous accomplishment," said BYU head coach Jason Watson. "We're as proud of our team as we've ever been. We were patient and composed when we could've let Washington get away from us."

BYU will now play Middle Tennessee State on Friday at 5 p.m. ET at Penn State University.

Junior middle blocker Rachel Dyer led the way for BYU with a career-high 22 kills on .625 hitting to go along with six blocks. Senior Chelsea Goodman recorded yet another double-double, her 23rd of the season and 57th of her career, with 16 kills and 20 digs, the third time this year she has posted at least 20 digs. Three other Cougars tallied double-digit kills as Erica Lott (17), Ashton Hansen (13) and Bryn Porter (10) reached double figures. Hansen led the Cougars with a .706 attack percentage and six blocks.

The Cougars began slow in game one as they fought to find their place against the nation's sixth-ranked team. Down 18-13, BYU began to make a run, scoring four straight including back-to-back aces from Dyer to get to within one point. Washington called a timeout to try to halt the Cougar momentum, but Goodman and Hansen combined for a block out of the break to knot the score at 18-18. BYU continued to pressure Washington, eventually earning a 25-22 lead late in the game. The Huskies battled back to tie the game at 26-26, but three straight Cougar points gave BYU three game-point opportunities at 29-26. A service error and a hitting error left the Cougars with just one left at 29-28, but they got the one that counted the most as Annie Pinegar sent a dig over that net that fell for a kill.

After an early battle in game two, the Cougars took a 7-5 lead on three straight points. Despite continued pressure by the Huskies, BYU kept pushing to a 12-8 lead after a kill from Goodman found its mark. However, after a 14-10 Cougar advantage, Washington put together a 4-0 run to knot the score. Amy Schlauder put BYU back on top with a dump that found the floor, and the Cougars soon had the lead up to five points at 21-16. But the Huskies once again responded to the BYU advance, scoring eight of the next 10 points to take their first lead since 5-4 at 24-23. From there, the two teams battled down the stretch with neither able to gain more than a one-point lead until three straight Husky scores gave them game point at 29-27. Hansen saved the first for BYU, but Washington got a kill on the next ball to take game two 30-28.

Washington came out fast and furious in game three, running up an early 5-1 lead before the Cougars called timeout. BYU scored three of the next four points out of the break but were thwarted in their comeback bid by a 5-0 Washington run leading to a 12-5 Husky lead. The advantage continued to grow for the home team until it became a 22-11 lead. The Cougars began to find life at that point, getting two kills and an ace from Goodman during a 10-3 run that cut the deficit to just four points at 25-21. But the early Husky lead proved insurmountable for BYU despite the late push as Washington got the 30-25 win.

With their backs against the wall, the Cougars came out fighting in game four, jumping out to an 8-5 lead. Three straight Husky scores knotted the score, but Lott responded with three consecutive winners of her own followed by a solo block to put BYU up 12-8 and prompt a Washington timeout. A Husky attack error out of the break kept the BYU run alive, and the Cougars soon found themselves with a 16-9 lead. A 4-0 Washington run allowed the Huskies to climb back in the game momentarily, but back-to-back kills from Goodman drove the lead to 20-14. Washington kept BYU on its toes as the game progressed and no lead felt safe, but in the end a .484 BYU attack percentage was too much for the Huskies as the Cougars powered to the 30-22 win.

For the third time in the last four matches, BYU found itself playing a fifth game for all the marbles. Washington scored three of the first four points, but the Cougars battled back with a 4-1 run to go up 5-4. The two teams fought tooth and nail as the lead see-sawed back and forth until BYU scored four straight points to go up 12-9. A raucous crowd tried to swing the momentum back in Washington's favor in the final stages, and the Huskies responded accordingly with back-to-back scores to cut the lead to just one point at 12-11. But Dyer came up big for the Cougars with back-to-back kills on the slide to give BYU match point at 14-12. A Cougar net call on the first point left BYU with just one more chance, but Goodman came flying in with a kill to give the Cougars a 15-13 win.

Volleyball Box Score

BYU Cougars

BYU Cougars vs #6 Washington (Dec 01, 2007 at Seattle, Wash.)

BYU Cougars | ATTACK |SET| SERVE |SRV|DEF| BLOCK |GEN

## Name GP| K E TA PCT| A| SA SE| RE|DIG|BS BA BE|BHE|POINTS

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1 GOODMAN, Chelsea.... 5| 16 10 42 .143| 1| 1 2| 0| 20| 0 3 0| 0| 18.5

4 HANSEN, Ashton...... 5| 13 1 17 .706| 2| 0 0| 0| 0| 0 6 0| 0| 16.0

10 LOTT, Erica......... 5| 17 7 33 .303| 0| 0 1| 2| 12| 1 2 1| 0| 19.0

13 PORTER, Bryn........ 5| 10 6 33 .121| 1| 2 3| 2| 2| 0 2 0| 0| 13.0

15 SCHLAUDER, Amy...... 5| 2 0 4 .500| 71| 0 0| 0| 5| 0 6 4| 3| 5.0

44 DYER, Rachel........ 5| 22 2 32 .625| 2| 2 3| 0| 3| 0 6 1| 0| 27.0

11 PINEGAR, Annie...... 5| 1 0 2 .500| 0| 1 0| 3| 15| 0 0 0| 0| 2.0

16 LAU, Stephanie...... 1| 0 0 0 .000| 0| 0 0| 0| 0| 0 0 0| 0| 0.0

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Totals.............. 5| 81 26 163 .337| 77| 6 9| 7| 57| 1 25 6| 3| 100.5

TEAM ATTACK PER GAME TOTAL TEAM BLOCKS: 13.5

Game K E TA Pct

1 18 7 36 .306 GAME SCORES 1 2 3 4 5 TEAM RECORDS

2 21 9 43 .279 BYU Cougars......... (3) 30 28 25 30 15 23-7

3 14 6 33 .242 Washington.......... (2) 28 30 30 22 13 27-4

4 18 2 32 .500

5 10 2 19 .421

Washington | ATTACK |SET| SERVE |SRV|DEF| BLOCK |GEN

## Name GP| K E TA PCT| A| SA SE| RE|DIG|BS BA BE|BHE|POINTS

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1 Mussie, Stevie...... 5| 35 10 62 .403| 0| 2 3| 2| 7| 0 0 0| 0| 37.0

2 Deesing, Alesha..... 5| 7 2 19 .263| 0| 0 0| 0| 0| 1 2 1| 0| 9.0

9 Morrison, Christal.. 5| 14 6 49 .163| 1| 3 0| 2| 13| 2 3 1| 0| 20.5

12 McAfee, Megan....... 5| 0 0 0 .000| 0| 0 2| 1| 4| 0 0 0| 0| 0.0

14 Hagglund, Jenna..... 5| 2 1 5 .200| 70| 2 0| 0| 8| 0 1 0| 1| 4.5

24 Swarbrick, Jessica.. 5| 13 3 23 .435| 2| 0 0| 0| 1| 1 2 2| 0| 15.0

5 Carlson, Kindra..... 2| 3 1 6 .333| 0| 0 0| 0| 0| 0 0 0| 0| 3.0

7 Miyashiro, Tamari... 5| 0 0 0 .000| 2| 0 1| 0| 13| 0 0 0| 0| 0.0

8 Aratani, Ashley..... 5| 0 0 0 .000| 0| 0 2| 0| 0| 0 0 0| 0| 0.0

10 Perry, Becky........ 4| 4 6 18 -.111| 0| 0 0| 1| 2| 0 0 0| 0| 4.0

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Totals.............. 5| 78 29 182 .269| 75| 7 8| 6| 48| 4 8 4| 1| 93.0

TEAM ATTACK PER GAME TOTAL TEAM BLOCKS: 8.0

Game K E TA Pct

1 16 5 32 .344 Site: Seattle, Wash. (Bank of America)

2 16 6 39 .256 Date: Dec 01, 2007 Attend: 2471 Time: 2:32

3 19 6 46 .283 Referees: Kevin Cull, Margie Ray

4 18 8 41 .244

5 9 4 24 .208

 

 
Anonymous | Posted: 28 Nov 2007 | Updated: 8 Nov 2020
Anonymous

Cougars Play Ole Miss in NCAA First Round

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PROVO -- For the 24th time in the 27-year existence of the NCAA Women's Volleyball Championship, the BYU women's volleyball team has qualified for the annual postseason tournament. The Cougars received one of 33 at-large selections Sunday after achieving a 21-7 overall record.

"We're very happy that we're in the Tournament and that we have a chance to continue playing this season," said BYU head coach Jason Watson. "BYU has a rich tradition in the Tournament, which we hope to add to. The team is excited to go play and compete against the best teams in the nation."

The Cougars will play the Ole Miss (25-7, 14-6 SEC) Friday at 4:30 p.m. PT (5:30 p.m. MT) in a first-round matchup hosted by the University of Washington at Bank of America Arena in Seattle. The winner of the BYU-Ole Miss match will play Saturday night at 6 p.m. PT against the winner of the No. 6-seeded Washington and Missouri contest slated for 7 p.m. PT Friday.

Ole Miss went 25-7 in the regular season and 14-6 in SEC play to finish third. The 25 wins is the most by the Rebels since the 1989 season and is the 10th time that an Ole Miss team has hit the 25-win mark as a program. The 14 wins in conference play is the most wins in SEC play in program history. The Rebels are led by senior outside hitter Katie Kramer with 3.66 kills per game followed closely by sophomore outside hitter Caitlin Weiss at 3.42 kpg. Junior setter Rachel Kieckhaefer, a second-team All-SEC pick, averages 11.45 assists per game while posting 3.36 digs per contest, second on the team. Senior libero Tara Langley picks up 5.09 digs per game to lead the Rebels. As a team, Ole Miss outperforms its opponents in kills (15.64-14.23), hitting percentage (.201-.181), assists (14.56-13.45) and aces (1.44-1.16).

"Ole Miss is a good team," said Watson. "We actually had the chance to see them play last year against USC in the first round of the NCAA Tournament, and they were incredibly competitive and very talented. We expect the same from them this year. They come from a very competitive volleyball conference in the SEC."

Friday's match will be just the second meeting between the Cougars and Rebels with BYU owning a 1-0 advantage by virtue of a victory at the 1978 AIAW National Tournament, the precursor to the NCAA Tournament. The Cougars have never played Missouri and are 11-0 all-time against Washington.

BYU played against seven schools this year that qualified for the 64-team field, earning a 4-6 record against those teams, including a five-game victory over No. 7-seeded Wisconsin. BYU also defeated tournament teams Northern Iowa (3-0) and American (3-0) while going 1-2 against UNLV (0-3, 3-1, 2-3), 0-2 against Colorado State (2-3, 0-3), 0-1 against 16th-seeded Cal Poly (1-3) and 0-1 against Stanford (1-3), the Tournament's top overall seed.

BYU is tied for ninth in all-time appearances with its 24th selection this season and is tied for the 11th-most NCAA Tournament victories with a 28-23 record. BYU's last appearance in the NCAA Tournament was last season when the Cougars defeated UC Santa Barbara in the first round before losing to fifth-seeded USC in the second round in Los Angeles.

The Cougars have advanced to the second round in 18 of their prior 23 appearances, with a 13-5 first-round record and five automatic byes. The Cougars have made 14 Sweet Sixteen appearances in their 23 bids and advanced to eight Elite Eight Regional Finals. BYU's top finish in the NCAA Tournament came in 1993 when the Cougars advanced to the NCAA Final Four before losing in the national semifinals to Penn State.

Thirty-one conferences were awarded automatic qualification to this year's event, with the remaining 33 slots being filled with at-large selections. The top 16 teams were seeded nationally and placed within four regions. The teams tabbed as the top four seeds were Stanford, Nebraska, Penn State and Texas. Team pairings were determined by geographical proximity, with the exception that teams from the same conference were not paired during the first and second rounds.

BYU is one of three Mountain West Conference teams to receive an invitation to this year's NCAA Tournament, joined by MWC regular-season champion Colorado State and MWC Tournament champion UNLV. The Big 12 Conference, the Big Ten Conference and the Pacific-10 Conference led all conferences with six teams selected. The Southeastern Conference garnered five teams in the field while the West Coast Conference and Missouri Valley Conference each have four teams in the tournament. Two teams, Penn State and Stanford have earned bids to all 27 championships. Six teams are making their initial appearances in the tournament: Cleveland State University, University of Delaware, Lipscomb University, South Dakota State University, Tennessee State University and UNLV.

In the 26-year history of the championship, 10 schools have been crowned champion, nine of which are in this year's bracket, including the defending champion Nebraska.

Additional past winners making the field are Stanford (1992, 1994, 1996, 1997, 2001 and 2004), University of Hawaii (1982, 1983 and 1987), Long Beach State (1989, 1993 and 1998), UCLA (1984, 1990 and 1991), Nebraska (1995, 2000 and 2006), USC (1981, 2002 and 2003), Penn State (1999), Texas (1988) and Washington (2005).

First- and second-round matches will be played at 16 campus sites. A list of the first-round match-ups follows.

STANFORD, CALIFORNIA REGIONAL

November 30 and December 1 at Stanford, California

*No. 1 Stanford (27-2) vs. Santa Clara (19-11)

Minnesota (18-12) vs. Sacramento St. (28-7)

November 30 and December 1 at Athens, Ohio

Purdue (18-13) vs. *Ohio (26-5)

Xavier (24-10) vs. No. 16 Cal Poly (21-7)

November 30 and December 1 at Manhattan, Kansas

*No. 9 Kansas St. (22-8) vs. Tulsa (27-8)

Oregon (20-10) vs. Missouri St. (25-7)

November 30 and December 1 at Clemson, South Carolina

Alabama (15-14) vs. *Clemson (28-3)

Alabama A&M (15-9) vs. No. 8 UCLA (20-10)

GAINESVILLE, FLORIDA REGIONAL

November 30 and December 1 at Los Angeles, California

*No. 5 USC (25-4) vs. Pepperdine (18-10)

Long Beach St. (25-6) vs. UNLV (24-5)

November 30 and December 1 at Queens, New York

Princeton (22-3) vs. Delaware (30-4)

Long Island (23-13) vs. *No. 12 St. John's (N.Y.) (31-3)

November 29 and 30 at Gainesville, Florida

*No. 13 Florida (27-2) vs. Col. of Charleston (26-7)

Florida A&M (18-7) vs. Oklahoma (21-9)

November 30 and December 1 at Austin, Texas

New Mexico St. (26-5) vs. LSU (24-7)

Texas St. (21-11) vs. *No. 4 Texas (24-3)

UNIVERSITY PARK, PENNSYLVANIA REGIONAL

November 30 and December 1 at University Park, Pennsylvania

*No. 3 Penn St. (28-2) vs. Siena (24-7)

Albany (N.Y.) (23-9) vs. Cleveland St. (23-8)

November 30 and December 1 at Ann Arbor, Michigan

*Michigan (22-10) vs. Miami (Ohio) (20-10)

Illinois St. (21-11) vs. No. 14 Colorado St. (22-7)

November 30 and December 1 at Louisville, Kentucky

No. 11 Hawaii (26-5) vs. Tennessee St. (20-13)

Middle Tenn. (33-2) vs. *Louisville (22-7)

November 30 and December 1 at Seattle, Washington

BYU (21-7) vs. Mississippi (25-7)

Missouri (17-12) vs. *No. 6 Washington (26-3)

MADISON, WISCONSIN REGIONAL

November 30 and December 1 at Madison, Wisconsin

*No. 7 Wisconsin (25-4) vs. Northern Iowa (22-10)

Iowa St. (17-13) vs. San Diego (21-7)

November 30 and December 1 at Durham, North Carolina

*Duke (24-6) vs. American (26-7)

Liberty (27-8) vs. No. 10 California (22-7)

November 30 and December 1 at Dayton, Ohio

*No. 15 Dayton (32-1) vs. Lipscomb (20-11)

Kentucky (22-9) vs. Michigan St. (19-13)

November 30 and December 1 at Lincoln, Nebraska

Wichita St. (26-5) vs. Western Ky. (27-8)

South Dakota St. (25-10) vs. *No. 2 Nebraska (27-1)

Teams winning both matches will move on to regional play December 7 and 8. The pre-determined regional sites are Stanford, Calif.; Gainesville, Fla.; University Park, Penn.; and Madison, Wis.. The regional winners will advance to the semifinals and final hosted by Sacramento State University and the Sacramento Sports Commission at ARCO Arena in Sacramento, Calif., on December 13 and 15.

For more information about the championship, log on to www.ncaasports.com.