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Match of the Year - UH vs UCLA
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Tim Robinson  
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 More options Jan 30 1996, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: rec.sport.volleyball
From: Tim Robinson <og...@aloha.net>
Date: 1996/01/30
Subject: Match of the Year - UH vs UCLA
Sorry this is late, my connection has been very quirky lately.

If you didn't see the match Saturday night at the Special Events Arena
here in Honolulu between the University of Hawaii and UCLA you only
missed the best match that will be played this year.  But don't worry,
you can see a replay on March 1 and March 2 when UCLA returns.  Somebody
should call Prime Sports or ESPN and suggest that they show these
matches.  I'm sure they will be tremendous matches also.  Was this match
televised on the mainland at all.  I know it was live on TV here in
Hawaii, as several of my friends told me they saw me on TV.

The final scores were 16-14, 12-15, 8-15, 15-8, and 16-14 with Hawaii
prevailing.  This was the most intense match I've ever witnessed.  this
one match alone makes it worth spending the night waiting in line to get
season tickets (front row!!!).  UCLA had come back in game 1 to take a
14-10 lead, then squandered 12 (count 'em, 12) game points before Hawaii
came back to win the game.  The next game, Hawaii was up 10-2 before
running out of energy (temporarily).  the rally scoring fifth game was so
intense all 9000+ fans were on their feet most of the game, and the roar
was deafening.  Two of my friends are going to bring ear plugs to the
next match.

I would have to say right now that the Player of the Year contest looks
like a battle between Yuval Katz of UH and Paul Nihipali of UCLA, both of
whom were incredible Saturday night.  For some inexplicable reason
Nihipali was left off the all-tournament team, and was even pulled from
the game for a while  Scates seems to be down on him, and I'm not sure
why.  He was nearly unstoppable, and is truly the complete package as he
showed by digging a number of blistering hits.  Can anybody enlighten me
as to the possible reasons for his being in Scate's doghouse?

See you all at the NCAA finals, and probably watch the same two teams.


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Mike Ching  
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 More options Jan 30 1996, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: rec.sport.volleyball
From: Mike Ching <oee...@mail.pixi.com>
Date: 1996/01/30
Subject: Re: Match of the Year - UH vs UCLA

I agree.  That was the best single game I have ever seen and possibly
the best match I have ever seen (rivalled only by the recent high
school struggles between Punahou and Kamehameha).  Besides the
closeness of the first and fifth games, what made it great was that
Hawaii was able to win both games (unlike the great Penn State match
in last year's tournament semi-finals).  Not to mention the deafening
crowd, of course.

For you rally-scoring detractors, the "true" score in the fifth game
was Hawaii 2, UCLA 1 (27 sideouts).

Interestingly the UCLA had three starters from Hawaii (Stein Metzger,
Brian Wells, Fred Robins) whereas Hawaii had three starters from
Israel (Katz, Sivan Leoni, Naveh Milo) and only one from Hawaii
(Aaron Wilton).  Robins, the true freshman from Waimanalo, finished
with 23 kills for UCLA, second only to Nihipali's 25.  Katz wound up
with 35, despite having only 2 in the losing third set.


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niceguy  
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 More options Jan 31 1996, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: rec.sport.volleyball
From: nice...@bitstream.net (niceguy)
Date: 1996/01/31
Subject: Re: Match of the Year - UH vs UCLA
In article <NEWTNews.823034663.11376.oee...@pixiuser.pixi.com>, Mike Ching

<oee...@mail.pixi.com> wrote:
> In article <4elnvh$...@nuhou.aloha.net>, <og...@aloha.net> writes:

> > If you didn't see the match Saturday night at the Special Events Arena
> > here in Honolulu between the University of Hawaii and UCLA you only
> > missed the best match that will be played this year.  But don't worry,
--snip #1--
> > The final scores were 16-14, 12-15, 8-15, 15-8, and 16-14 with Hawaii
> > prevailing.  This was the most intense match I've ever witnessed.  this
--snip #2--
> For you rally-scoring detractors, the "true" score in the fifth game
> was Hawaii 2, UCLA 1 (27 sideouts).

--snip #3--

Can we PLEASE get rid of the cursed "Rally Scoring" for the fifth game?
Why does volleyball insist on changing one of its most basic rules - that
you have to be serving to score points - just because it's the fifth game?

Whenever I attend a volleyball match, and they anounce that the fifth game
is rally scoring, I stand up and BOO!  Please feel free to do the same...

Let's get rid of rally scoring FOREVER!!

John

nice...@bitstream.net


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Mike Ching  
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 More options Feb 1 1996, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: rec.sport.volleyball
From: Mike Ching <oee...@mail.pixi.com>
Date: 1996/02/01
Subject: Re: Match of the Year - UH vs UCLA

In article <4elnvh$...@nuhou.aloha.net>, <og...@aloha.net> writes:

> I would have to say right now that the Player of the Year contest looks
> like a battle between Yuval Katz of UH and Paul Nihipali of UCLA, both of
> whom were incredible Saturday night.  For some inexplicable reason
> Nihipali was left off the all-tournament team, and was even pulled from
> the game for a while  Scates seems to be down on him, and I'm not sure
> why.  He was nearly unstoppable, and is truly the complete package as he
> showed by digging a number of blistering hits.  Can anybody enlighten me
> as to the possible reasons for his being in Scate's doghouse?

For the record, this was the announced all-tournament team:  Phil
Eatherington, Ball State;  Ivan Contreras, Penn State;  Jason Ring,
Hawaii;  Erik Pichel, Hawaii;  Brian Wells, UCLA;  Stein Metzger, UCLA;
MVP -- Yuval Katz, Hawaii.

Two of the selections seem a bit off.  Though I love setter Erik Pichel's
athleticism (he reminds me of Eric Sato when he's hitting in warmups),
Pichel was benched in the third game against UCLA for Curt Vaughan.  I
disagreed when coach Wilton left Pichel on the bench when game 4 started,
but the Rainbows won both game 4 and the exciting game 5 with the purple-
haired Vaughan at setter.  Pichel looks to be a quicker and more
accurate with his sets than Vaughan, but Vaughan is about 3 or 4 inches
taller and can handle the high pass with his jump sets.

The other selection that seemed odd was Brian Wells.  Wells is, of
course, a good player; but is by no means the go-to guy of the Bruins
(which is Nihipali).  Wells had 15 kills in the Hawaii match;
Nihipali had 25 with freshman Fred Robins adding 23.  Probably the
reason Wells was voted to the tournament team was that Scates chose
to sit both Nihipali and Robins out in the first match of the
tournament vs. Penn State.  I'm not sure if it was because he had
disciplinary problems with these players, or that he just wanted to
give some extra playing time to the rest of his talented roster.

As an aside, I noticed that a player named Vallely often subbed in
to serve for the Bruins.  Is this, by any chance, the son of John
Vallely, the former UCLA basketball player?


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Charlie Jackson  
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 More options Feb 6 1996, 3:00 am
Newsgroups: rec.sport.volleyball
From: wiredco...@msn.com (Charlie Jackson)
Date: 1996/02/06
Subject: Re: Match of the Year - UH vs UCLA
In article <NEWTNews.823242858.16446.oee...@pixiuser.pixi.com>, Mike Ching

<oee...@mail.pixi.com> wrote:
> As an aside, I noticed that a player named Vallely often subbed in
> to serve for the Bruins.  Is this, by any chance, the son of John
> Vallely, the former UCLA basketball player?

Yes, Eric Vallely is John Vallely's son.

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