Friday, March 27, 2009

Back-to-Back Sweeps of Hawaii Completed




Freshmen Shine In UC Irvine's 3-0 Victory Over No. 13 Hawaii
Austin D'Amore records career-high 10 kils

March 27, 2009

Final Stats

Irvine, Calif. – Freshmen Carson Clark and Austin D’Amore were too much to handle as No. 1 UC Irvine defeated No. 13 Hawaii, 3-0 (30-19, 30-24, 32-30) at the Bren Events Center Friday.

UCI’s wining streak goes to seven as the Anteaters improve to 19-3 overall and remain at the top of the MPSF standings with a 14-2 record. Hawaii drops to 6-15 on the year and 3-13 in league play.

Clark, a freshman opposite, pounded a match-high 20 kills, while D’Amore, a freshman middle blocker, recorded a career-high 10 kills and hit .562 (10-1-16). The duo each added five block assists. Senior Taylor Wilson totaled eight kills and had six digs to share the team lead with Jordan DuFault who also recorded seven kills and five blocks. Middle blocker Kevin Wynne hit .500 (6-1-10) and had a match-high seven blocks. Senior setter Ryan Ammerman guided the team to a .379 hitting percentage with 50 set assists, five digs and three blocks.

Last night the Anteater serving was the key, but tonight UCI’s blocking was dominant with a 14 to 7 advantage. For the second consecutive night, Hawaii hit .125 (35-23-96).

Hawaii was led by Brennon Dyer with 11 kills and five digs. Sean Carney recorded 10 kills and five digs, while Gus Tuaniga had seven kills and Matt Rawson added five blocks.

UCI’s freshmen started the match off on fire with Carson Clark recording eight kills and Austin D’amore adding seven (.700) without committing an error as the Anteaters won the set 30-19. UCI took control of the set on back-to-back blocks to go ahead 8-3. The Warriors would get no closer than two the rest of the way.

With the second set tied at 21-21, UCI scored three unanswered on kills by Clark and Taylor Wilson plus a Hawaii attack error (24-21). UCI would close out the set out-scoring the Warriors 6-3 for the 30-24 victory.

Hawaii led 25-22 late in the third set before UCI used two Jordan DuFault kills, a Warrior attack attempt that went long and a block by Kevin Wynne and Ryan Ammerman to take the 26-25 advantage. The teams would trade points until a kill by Ammerman was followed by an attack error by Brennon Dyer to end the set, 32-30.

UCI will travel to BYU for a pair of matches next Thursday and Friday (Apr. 2-3).

Thursday, March 26, 2009

Night # vs. Hawaii-- The Sweep




Taylor Wilson Leads No. 1 UC Irvine To Sweep Of No. 13 Hawaii
Austin D'Amore Records Career-High 8 Block Assists

March 26, 2009

Final Stats

Irvine, Calif. – Taylor Wilson led top-ranked UC Irvine to a 3-0 victory over No. 13 Hawaii (30-17, 30-25, 30-26) Thursday at the Bren Events Center.

The Anteaters win their sixth in a row and improve to 18-3 overall and 13-2 in the MPSF. Hawaii drops to 6-14 on the year and 3-12 in league play.

Wilson paced UCI with a match-high 15 kills, three aces and three blocks. Jordan DuFault recorded nine kills followed by Carson Clark with seven. Senior Jon Steller totaled six kills and had two aces while middle blocker Austin D’Amore totaled six kills and hit .750 (6-0-8) while knocking down a career and match-best eight block assists. Middle blocker Kevin Wynne also had six kills with Cole Reinholm adding three kills. Setter Ryan Ammerman tallied 38 set assists, two blocks and three blocks. Libero Brent Asuka recorded a match-high seven digs.

UCI hit .329 for the match and fired nine aces while out-blocking Hawaii 9 to 5. Hawaii was held to a .125 hitting percentage.

Sean Carney was the lone Hawaii player in double-digit kills with 11. Brennon Dyer and Gus Tuaniga each recorded five digs with Tuaniga firing three aces. Setter Nejc Zemljak recorded 27 set assists and five digs.

UCI stretched an 8-7 lead to 18-9 on three aces and two of Jordan DuFault’s team-high five kills in the first set. The Anteaters fired six service aces on its way to a 30-17 game one victory.

Hawaii jumped out to a 7-4 lead in the second set but UCI went on an 8-3 run to take a 12-10 lead. UCI led 12-11 before scoring four straight on a kill by Austin D’Amore, two blocks by D’Amore and DuFault and an ace by Taylor Wilson to go ahead 16-11. The Warriors closed to 22-21 on a kill by Sean Carney before Jon Steller fired two aces and Taylor Wilson buried two kills to give the Anteaters the 27-21 cushion. Wilson put away eight kills as UCI took the set, 30-25.

UCI started the third set 6-0 and never looked back as UCI recorded a 30-26 victory on a kill by Steller.

The two teams are back in action again tomorrow night at 7:00 p.m. in the Bren Center.

Steller Article on "Peter's People" @ UCI



Hi everyone, this was a great piece on Jon Steller, Sr. OPP from Fresno, CA. Click on the image above to view!

Ammerman Article in Daily Pilot


http://www.dailypilot.com/articles/2009/03/26/sports/uci/dpt-spammerman032609.txt


Published Thursday, March 26, 2009 12:18 AM PDT
Sports
Ammerman proves to be worth wait

VOLLEYBALL: UCI’s 6-foot-9 setter, a fifth-year senior, has stepped up to help Anteaters claim nation’s No. 1 ranking.
By Barry Faulkner

Watching an expressionless Ryan Ammerman take the court, moving sloth-like — trudging really — into the crucible of competition, one could easily fathom that the pace of his progress in the UC Irvine men’s volleyball program has been somewhat less frenetic than that of global warming.

Some, Ammerman among them, might suggest that glaciers have liquefied in the time it has taken the seemingly perennial rookie from the Rockies to assume, at the center of the Anteaters’ offense, the stature that his 6-foot-9 frame had promised.

There were multiple instances, one as recent as last summer, when the outwardly sedate setter from Parker Colo., a Denver suburb, had all but decided to slip away to a potential professional future in Europe, rather than face the excruciating self-doubt that, last year, made his hair fall out in clumps.

The stress-induced affliction prompted a virtual season-long Mohawk, a display considered a diametrical departure for the guy known by his friends and teammates for comporting himself with all the cool of a Colorado winter.

“I finally came to the point where I didn’t really care what happened this year, in terms of volleyball,” said Ammerman, whose development Coach John Speraw cites as the leading factor in UCI’s ascension to the No. 1 national ranking.

The Anteaters (17-3, 12-2 in the Mountain Pacific Sports Federation) put their top ranking on the line tonight at 7 against MPSF visitor Hawaii at the Bren Events Center. The two teams also meet Friday at 7.

“When I was in Europe last summer [coaching a junior team with UCI assistant Dave Kniffin and filling out pickup games designed to showcase players attempting to catch on with professional teams], I was thinking about staying there,” said Ammerman, who admitted that after his initial redshirt season in 2005, he actually enrolled at Metro State, a Division II school in Denver, but elected to stay at UCI.

“My ultimate decision [to return from Europe] came down to wanting to be around the guys one more year, regardless of what happened in volleyball,” said Ammerman, who shared national player of the week laurels after his 52 assists keyed a five-game triumph at then-top-ranked Cal State Northridge March 13. He had a career-high 66 assists one week before in a five-game win at UCLA.

“I just wanted to be in Newport [Beach] one more year and enjoy the college experience.”

Coincidentally, it was the experience he obtained over a month of coaching and barnstorming in Germany, Italy, Austria, Slovenia and Spain, as well as the daily affirmation provided by Kniffin, that instilled in Ammerman the belief that he could still hang with the guys on the court, as well as at the beach house.

“It was the turning point in my career,” Ammerman said of the trip to Europe. “I developed a new sense of confidence about myself over there that I really hadn’t had since high school. I saw that I was capable of playing at that level. And just being around Kniffin, who is a very positive guy, really helped. Kniffin [a former UCI setter] was confident in me and I just haven’t had very many people confident in me since I’ve been [at UCI] working and striving hard to improve and improve and improve. He was able to show me that I actually was a good setter and I just needed to believe that.”

Speraw, known for mining nuggets from the outreaches of the club circuit, also saw something in Ammerman, who before his junior year at Chaparral High, morphed from a 5-foot-11 unknown into a 6-foot-6 prospect competing for the Colorado Gold club program.

High school volleyball in Colorado was also a club sport at the time and Ammerman, whose father played club volleyball and basketball at Purdue and whose mother played volleyball at Alaska-Anchorage, commuted two hours each way to Boulder to find only slightly better competition at what was then the state’s only club.

“Living in Colorado, my coach pretty much my whole life had been my dad,” said Ammerman, who chose UCI over Indiana Purdue-Fort Wayne and George Mason, though other schools offered more lucrative scholarships if he would convert to outside hitter. [My dad] loved the game, but he didn’t know much, especially about setting, because he was a middle blocker. Everything I learned about setting growing up was pretty much self-taught. So, I knew when I got [to UCI], I was going to be behind the curve with guys who were playing against good competition every weekend, every year.”

Ammerman’s initial experiences as an Anteater did nothing to alter that assessment.

“I wasn’t very good and I wasn’t even playing during practice,” Ammerman recalled of his redshirt season. “It was very frustrating.”

The frustration continued the next two seasons as an apprentice to All-American Brian Thornton, from whom Ammerman learned a great deal and, now as an assistant coach at Orange Coast College, is still a valued mentor with whom Ammerman regularly consults.

When Thornton graduated after helping lead the 2007 team to the program’s first NCAA crown, Ammerman was expected to assume the starting job.

“Last year was supposed to be my time to step in and I still wasn’t ready,” said Ammerman, whose penchant for perfection and analytical nature magnified every misdeed to mountainous proportions. “I had zero confidence in myself to do much of anything and that’s why I struggled so much last year. It was not much fun for me, because I wasn’t performing at the level I was supposed to and I knew that.”

Speraw, who frequently benched Ammerman last season, said his problems were mostly mental.

“Ammo always wants to be great and he has been great this season,” Speraw said. “But he’s better when he realizes he doesn’t have to be great.”

Ammerman said inconsistent placement of his sets has been his biggest concern, but added that his willingness to accentuate his strong serving, as well as his formidable blocking and hitting presence at the net, help him work through periodic instances when his aim goes awry.

“I used to get all wound up about a mistake, but this year, one of my goals has been to be more mellow and level-headed,” Ammerman said. “I used to constantly over think and over analyze things and Speraw always tells me I try too hard to be perfect. Sometimes, I need to just step back and see that I am doing things right and playing well. I need to accept that I can make a mistake and move on.”

Ammerman credits the continual support of his teammates and coaches for bolstering a confidence that seems to have fully blossomed.

“My teammates are awesome, and I definitely can’t say enough about what Speraw and Kniffin and [assistant Mark] Presho have meant to my development,” Ammerman said. “Not very many people saw my potential as a setter in high school, but Speraw was able to recognize and trust that one day I might develop into something good. I’m thankful that he did.”

Said Speraw: “He’s having a great season. His improvement from last year to this year has been awesome to watch; really fun to see.”

Now many of Speraw’s colleagues also see what Ammerman has become — a potential All-American and a catalyst in the ’Eaters’ quest for their second national title in three seasons.

And Ammerman said that recognition from opposing coaches, many of whom must wonder to themselves “Where did this guy come from?” is noticeable.

“I can definitely see that [surprise] in their eyes when I shake their hand at the end of matches,” Ammerman said.

This season will not be the end of Ammerman’s volleyball career.

The social science major who is scheduled to graduate after next summer, said he plans to play professionally in Europe. He is also hopeful about a future on the pro beach circuit.

“My life is volleyball and it has been that way for a long time,” Ammerman said.

Once again, it is also his bliss.

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


BARRY FAULKNER may be reached at (714) 966-4615 or at barry.faulkner@latimes.com.

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

There's A New #1 in the Nation!



http://www.ucirvinesports.com/sports/m-volley/spec-rel/031609aaa.html

UC Irvine Climbs To No. 1 In Rankings
Anteaters earn No. 1 ranking four different years under John Speraw

March 16, 2009

Irvine, Calif. -- The UC Irvine men's volleyball team (17-3, 12-2) moved to No. 1 in the Bison/AVCA Coaches Poll.

UCI has been ranked No. 1 in four different years (2003, 2006, 2007, 2009) since head coach John Speraw's arrival in 2003, including three of the last four seasons. The Anteaters have been ranked in the nation’s top 10 for 67 consecutive weeks, including No. 1 for 14 of those weeks.

The Anteaters are idle this week for final exams and return to action hosting Hawaii March 26 and 27 at 7:00 p.m. in the Bren Events Center.

Kevin Wynne Shares MPSF POTW Honors



http://www.mpsports.org/sports/m-volley/spec-rel/031709aaa.html

WYNNE AND BITTNER MPSF MOLTEN PLAYERS OF THE WEEK
Woodland, Calif. - UC Irvine sophomore middle blocker Kevin Wynne (Mission Viejo, CA/Capistrano Valley HS) lifted the Anteaters to a key win at top-ranked CS Northridge in five sets last Friday. He hit .500 (12-4-16) while knocking down a match and season-high nine blocks, also one shy of a career-high. This defensive effort was against one of the top offenses in the nation. UCI defeated a No. 1 ranked team for the fourth time ever.

Woodland, Calif. -Long Beach State junior opposite Dean Bittner (Lakewood, CA/Lakewood HS) led his team to a win over IPFW and '08 national champ and No. 4 Penn State. He was the Active Ankle Tournament MVP for totaling 31 kills in eight sets (3.88 KPS) while hitting .369. He served three aces vs. the Lions and had 11 total blocks in the two matches (1.38 B/S). Also Nominated: Kevin Sagers (BYU), Jeff Menzel (UCSB).

Saturday, March 14, 2009

#2 UCI Upsets #1 CSUN




No. 2 UC Irvine Takes Down No. 1 Cal State Northridge, 3-2
Battle of top two teams does not disappoint
March 13, 2009


Northridge, Calif. – The battle of the top two teams in the country did not disappoint as No. 2 UC Irvine upset No. 1 Cal State Northridge, 3-2 (27-30, 30-28, 30-23, 26-30, 15-10) at the Matadome Friday.

The Anteaters improve to 17-3 overall and 12-2 in the MPSF, while Northridge goes to 16-3 overall and 12-3 in league action. UCI won its fifth in a row and snaps the Matadors 10-match winning streak. The Anteaters are 4-0 in five set matches this year.

Four Anteater players recorded kills in double-figures led by sophomore outside hitter Jordan DuFault with 17. He also recorded eight digs and six blocks. Freshman Carson Clark totaled 14 kills, seven digs and seven blocks. Middle hitter Kevin Wynne had a match-high nine blocks, which ties his season-high to go with 12 kills, hitting .500 (12-4-16) for the match. Sophomore Cory Yoder came off the bench to put away 10 kills. Setter Ryan Ammerman, the reigning National Player of the Week, had six kills, 52 set assists and two aces, while libero Nick Spittle had eight digs.

UCI out-blocked Northridge 18 to 12. UCI hit .287 (65-26-136) while the Matadors hit .305 (68-25-141) on the night.

Cal State Northridge’s Eric Vance had a match-high 20 kills and nine digs. Tanner Nau had 17 kills and four aces, while Jacek Ratajczak added 13 kills, hit .522 and had a team-best six blocks. Ali’i Keohohou had a match-high 14 digs and Matt Stork recorded 63 set assists.


UCI jumped out to a 5-2 lead in the first set behind the tough serving of Carson Clark and without taking a single swing then continued to lead 9-4 on just four attempts. UCI was cruising to a 20-15 advantage until Northridge rallied on a 6-1 run to tie the score at 21-21 on a kill by Tanner Nua. With the score tied 23-23, Nau fired back-to-back service aces to give the Matadors the 25-23 cushion. The Anteaters would close to 28-27 on a Northridge serving error before the Matadors won the set on a kill by Jacek Ratajczak and a block, 30-27.


The Matadors held the 18-14 advantage in the second set before Ryan Ammerman stepped to the service line and rallied UCI to five straight points which included an ace and kills by Clark and Kevin Wynne. Northridge closed the gap to 29-28 on an Eric Vance kill, but a Matador service error gave UCI the set, 30-28.



Following a 17-17 tie, UCI scored three unanswered on two Matador miscues and a service ace by Austin D’Amore to take a 20-17 lead in the third set. The Anteaters would take a 26-20 lead on kills by Clark and Wynne, an ace by Jordan DuFault and a Northridge attack error. UCI would go on to win the set 30-23 behind Nick Spittle’s solid defense. The Matadors hit .062 (11-9-32) in the set as UCI recorded six blocks.


In the fourth set, UCI led 14-12 before Northridge rallied to take a 17-15 lead. Northridge scored on an Anteater attack attempt that sailed just wide and a kill by Vance off the block to go ahead 22-20. CSUN would extend the lead to 27-23 on a Vance solo block and then win the set 30-26 to force a fifth set. Cal State Northridge hit .520 (15-2-25).


The Anteaters started strong with a 5-1 lead and built a 10-5 advantage on their way to a 15-10 victory. UCI did not commit a hitting error in the final set, hitting .562 (9-0-16).


UCI will take next week off for finals and return to action hosting Hawaii April 26 and 27 in the Bren Center.

Thursday, March 12, 2009

Ryan Ammerman Sweeps Player of the Week Honors



http://www.ucirvinesports.com/sports/m-volley/spec-rel/030909aaa.html

Ammerman becomes the 13th Anteater to earn National Player of the Week honors

March 9, 2009

Irvine, Calif. – UC Irvine setter Ryan Ammerman has been named the Sports Imports/AVCA Division I-II Men’s National Player of the Week as well as Mountain Pacific Sports Federation Co-Player of the Week with Pepperdine's Paul Carroll.

Ammerman guided the second-ranked Anteaters to victories of Loyola-Chicago and No. 11 UCLA last week. In a sweep of Loyola-Chicago to begin the week, Ammerman recorded 29 assists, and added eight blocks, leading his squad to a .299 hitting percentage. In the match at UCLA, he tallied a career-high 66 assists in five games, adding a team-high 11 digs, while leading UCI to a .336 hitting percentage. His 66 assists are ranked eighth in the UCI rally scoring record books.

For the week, Ammerman averaged 11.88 assists per game, while adding nearly two digs and blocks per game, all while leading the Anteaters to an impressive .322 hitting percentage.

No. 2 UC Irvine will travel to No. 1 Cal State Northridge Friday (Mar. 13) at 7:00 p.m. in the Matadome.

Ammo MPSF Player of the Week 3/9/09

http://www.mpsports.org/sports/m-volley/spec-rel/031009aaa.html

CARROLL AND AMMERMAN MPSF MOLTEN PLAYERS OF THE WEEK
Woodland, Calif. - Pepperdine senior opposite Paul Carroll (Forster, Australia) totaled 57 kills in 10 sets, leading the Waves to a pair of five-set comeback MPSF road wins. At No. 6 Long Beach State, he had 26 kills, a career-high 16 digs, and eight blocks. The Waves were down 2-0 in sets that night. At No. 10 UC San Diego, Carroll slammed 31 kills (.467), along with 13 digs, eight blocks, and two aces. Pepperdine came back from a first set loss. For the week, Carroll hit .393 (57-13-112), while averaging 5.70 kills, 2.90 digs, and 1.60 blocks.

Woodland, Calif. - UC Irvine senior setter Ryan Ammerman (Parker, CO/Chapparel HS) dished out a career-high 66 assists, eighth-most in UCI single-match rally scoring history, in guiding the Anteaters to a five-set win at No. 11 UCLA. He added 11 digs for the double-double and led the team to a .336 hitting attack. In a 3-0 home win over Loyola-Chicago earlier in the week, Ammerman had a career-high eight blocks.

Monday, March 9, 2009

Ammo AVCA Player of the Week 3/9/09

http://www.avca.org/awards/players-of-the-week/men-division-one-two/


Ammerman Sets Career High, Leads Anteaters to Two Wins
March 9 - Ryan Ammerman, a 6-9 senior setter for then-No. 2 UC Irvine, has been named the Sports Imports/AVCA Division I-II Men's National Player of the Week. Ammerman and the Anteaters won two matches last week, including a road test at the always-tough Pauley Pavilion. In a sweep of Loyola-Chicago to begin the week, Ammerman recorded 29 assists, and added eight blocks, leading his squad to a .322 hitting percentage. In the match at UCLA, ranked No. 11 last week, Ammerman tallied a career-high 66 assists in five games, adding a team-high 11 digs, while leading UCI to a .336 hitting percentage. His 66 assists are ranked eighth in the UCI rally scoring record books. For the week, Ammerman averaged nearly 12 assists per game, while adding nearly two digs and blocks per game, all while leading the Anteaters to an impressive .322 hitting percentage. This is the first Sports Imports Division I-II Men's National Player of the Week Ammerman has received, and he is the thirteenth player from UCI ever to earn those honors. UC Irvine is coached by John Speraw..

'Eaters Best the Bruins in 5

http://www.ucirvinesports.com/sports/m-volley/recaps/030709aaa.html

No. 2 UC Irvine Escapes No. 11 UCLA, 3-2
Jordan DuFault and Carson Clark lead UCI with 21 kills each

March 6, 2009

Final Stats

Los Angeles, Calif. – Sophomore Jordan DuFault and freshman Carson Clark each recorded 21 kills as second-ranked UC Irvine escaped No. 11 UCLA 3-2 (30-26, 30-28, 27-20, 29-31, 15-11) at Pauley Pavilion Friday.

UC Irvine improves to 16-3 overall and remains tied for the MPSF lead with Cal State Northridge at 11-2. The Anteaters and Matadors will battle next Friday at 7:00 p.m. in the Matadome. UCLA falls to 8-11 on the year and 4-8 in league play.

DuFault tied his career-high with 21 kills, while hitting .500 from the outside and recording eight digs. Clark put away 21 kills from the rightside for the second straight MPSF match, while adding three service aces and a career-high 10 digs. Senior Taylor Wilson had nine kills and setter Ryan Ammerman totaled a career-high 66set assists, 11 digs and six total blocks. Freshman Austin D’Amore led all players with eight total blocks and tied his career-high with six kills. Middle blocker Kevin Wynne recorded six total blocks, while outside hitter Cory Yoder came off the bench in the final three sets to add five kills and five digs. Serving specialist Nick Spittle fired three aces.

The Anteaters out-blocked UCLA, 16 to 9 and out-dug the Bruins 50-45. UCI hit .336 for the match, while UCLA hit .261.

UCLA’s Jack Polales had a match-high 22 kills followed by Brett Perrine with 15 kills. Jamey Ker totaled a match-high 15 digs.

UCLA jumped out to a quick 5-1 lead in the first set, but the Anteaters rallied to tie the score at 6-6 and took their first lead at 9-8 on a Carson Clark kill. Following a 16-16 deadlock, UCI scored the next three points to take the 19-16 advantage. The Bruins closed to 25-23, but back-to-back kills by Clark gave UCI the 27-23 cushion as they went onto the 30-26 victory. Clark put away eight kills in the set.

In the second set, there were 12 ties the last at 19-19 before the Anteaters scored four straight on a pair of Bruin miscues and kills by Jordan DuFault and Austin D’Amore to give UCI the 23-19 edge. UCI continued to lead 25-21 before UCLA out-scored the Anteaters 7-4 to close to 29-28. Jordan DuFault ended the set with a kill, 30-28.

UCLA hit .406 and won the third set 30-27. UCI hit .333, but had seven service errors. The Bruins took a 1-0 lead and never trailed, but watched the Anteaters close to 27-26 on a DuFault ace. The teams each scored a point before the Bruins scored the next two to win the set.

UCI led 17-16 in the fourth set before UCLA committed three straight errors (service error, attack error, ball handling error) to give the Anteaters the 20-16 advantage. UCLA would not go away, tying the set at 24-24 then took a 25-24 lead. The teams would remain tied three more times including 27-27. UCI would then stuff two consecutive attacks to take a 29-27 lead only to watch the Bruins record the next four kills to win the set 31-29.

UCI led 6-3 in the final set, before an Anteater block was followed by two Nick Spittle service aces to extend the margin to 9-3. UCLA narrowed the lead to 13-10 on four consecutive points until a Bruin service error stopped the spurt and gave UCI match point 14-10. A Bruin kill delayed the win, 15-11.

UC Irvine improves to 16-3 overall and remains tied for the MPSF lead with Cal State Northridge at 11-2. The Anteaters and Matadors will battle next Friday at 7:00 p.m. in the Matadome. UCLA falls to 8-11 on the year and 4-8 in league play.

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Ramblers Get Rumbled by Eaters



UCI out-blocked the Ramblers 12.5 to 3.0
UC Irvine Middle Blockers Key 3-0 Victory Over Loyola-Chicago

UCI middles hit .538 and record 10 total blocks

March 4, 2009

Final Stats

Irvine, Calif. – UC Irvine middle blockers were key as the second-ranked Anteaters swept Loyola-Chicago, 3-0 (30-23, 30-27, 30-21) in a non-conference match at Crawford Court Wednesday.

Sophomore middle blocker Kevin Wynne led UCI with 10 kills in 15 attempts without an error to hit a season-high .667. Freshman middle blocker Austin D’Amore led the team with eight total blocks, while adding six kills, which ties his career-high. Setter Ryan Ammerman matched D’Amore with eight total blocks while dishing 29 assists and guiding a balanced Anteater attack to a .299 hitting percentage. Senior Taylor Wilson had eight kills and two service aces, sophomore Jordan DuFault added seven kills and nine digs, while senior Jon Steller pitched-in four kills and a season-best eight digs. Libero Brent Asuka popped up 11 digs.

The Anteaters, who improved to 15-3 overall, owned the net, out-blocking the Ramblers 12.5 to 3.0. Loyola-Chicago (8-6) hit .121 for the match.

Krisjanis Berzins led the Ramblers with a match-high 11 kills. Michael Morice and Mike Bunting each added nine kills, while George Kamberos had 11 digs.

Loyola-Chicago used back-to-back aces by Mike Bunting to give the Ramblers the 14-11 edge in the first set. The Anteaters then outscored LUC, 9-3, the final to points of the spurt on Kevin Wynne kills to take a 20-17 lead. Wynne led all players with seven kills as the Anteaters took the set 30-23.

In the second set the score was tied at 17-17 before UCI had four unanswered points, two which were kills by Jordan DuFault to put the Anteaters ahead, 21-17. LUC closed within 28-26, but the teams traded points to give UCI the set 30-27 on another Wynne kill.

UCI jumped out to a 6-2 lead in the third set, but LUC rallied to knot the score at 7-7. The teams remained close until UCI used a kill by Austin D’Amore and three Rambler attack errors, the last a solo block by Ryan Ammerman, to give the Anteaters an 18-14 cushion. UCI would go on to take the set 30-21.

The Anteaters travel to UCLA Friday (Mar. 6) for a 7:00 p.m. first serve in Pauley Pavilion.