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VB's Post-Season Push Brings No. 13 K-State

Nov. 18, 2008

 

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COLUMBIA, Mo.—The Missouri volleyball team (13-13, 7-9 Big 12) has won four-straight home matches and are winners of three of its last four contests, but No. 13 Kansas State (22-6, 12-5 Big 12) will come to the Hearnes Center Wednesday in hopes of stopping any MU post-season hopes. The Tigers are coming off a crucial road victory at Colorado on Saturday while the Wildcats nearly upset No. 4 Texas this past weekend.

Big 12 Volleyball, #13 Kansas State at Missouri,
Columbia, Mo., Hearnes Center, Wednesday, November 19, 7:30pm
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Coaches
Missouri (13-13, 7-9 Big 12): Wayne Kreklow (Drake '80), 340-73 overall (10th year), 73-44 at Mizzou (4th year), 182-90 at with wife at Mizzou (9th year), 5-10 vs Kansas State
Kansas State (22-6, 12-5 Big 12): Suzie Fritz (Florida Atlantic, 1994), 146-68 overall (7th year), 146-68 at Kansas State (7th year), 9-4 vs Missouri

Scouting Kansas State …
The Tigers will welcome the No. 13 Kansas State Wildcats to the Hearnes Center. Kansas State dropped to the No. 4 Texas Longhorns in five sets on Saturday. Texas won the first two sets and the Wildcats rallied to even the match up 2-2 but Texas came through to win.

Kansas State is lead by Jenny Jantsch a senior outside hitter with 23 service aces in conference and 33 total on the season. Jantsch is also second behind sophomore libero Lauren Mathewson in digs with 153 in Big 12 matches. Junior middle blocker Kelsey Chipman has a team high of 241 kills. Sarah Allison, a red-shirt freshman and sophomore Megan Farr is the team leader in hitting percentage with .333 each. Farr also has 131 total blocks, 10 single and 121 assisted leading 1.22 blocks per set.

The Wildcats lead their opponents in every offensive and defensive statistic. K-State is 11-2 this season in the friendly confines of Ahearn Fieldhouse in Manhattan, but just 6-4 on the road.

-- Dana Burton

Last Time We Met … Mizzou lost 3-1 in Manhattan, October 8, 2008
The Missouri volleyball team (8-8, 2-4 Big 12) put an early shock into the No. 16 Kansas State Wildcats (15-3, 5-2 Big 12), but couldn't pull off a Wednesday night upset in Manhattan, falling 25-23, 22-25, 23-25, 22-25. Sophomore Catie Wilson (Omaha, Neb.) was electric in scoring a team-high, season-high, and tied-career-high 12 kills on a .385 hitting percentage while Amanda Hantouli and Weiwen Wang added 10 kills apiece. Hantouli also led the team with four blocks while Weiwen tallied 12 assists for a double-double.

Sophomore Julianna Klein marked nine kills on the night, adding a career-high 19 digs. Sophomore libero Caitlyn Vann notched 19 kills as well, adding three service aces.

Lei Wang contributed another double-double in spreading 29 assists and 13 digs.

K-State was led by Natalya Korobkova who had a match-high 16 kills. Megan Farr scored on six blocks and 11 kills.

Last Time Out … at Colorado, Saturday
The Missouri volleyball team (13-13, 7-9 Big 12) scored its 600th victory in program history Saturday afternoon with a four-set win over Colorado (12-13, 6-10 Big 12), 25-23, 25-22, 20-25, 25-20. Mizzou, winning just its second conference road contest, moves into a tie for fifth place in the Big 12 standings, its best position in the league this season. Junior Megan Wilson (Lincoln, Neb.) led Mizzou for the second-straight match, grabbing 15 kills on .344 hitting (15-4-32).

Wilson also tallied three blocks in the match, following up a Wednesday performance in which she scored a season-best 16 kills at conference-leading Nebraska.

With the win, Mizzou keeps hope alive of securing a possible at-large selection to the NCAA Tournament. Needing an above .500 record overall for consideration, Mizzou still needs to finish its last four matches with a 3-1-or-better record to finish its season above .500. A home matchup against No. 14 Kansas State on Wednesday proves critical for MU's post-season hopes.

Wilson was one of three Tigers with a double-digit kill total. Sophomore Julianna Klein tallied 13 kills, and added 15 digs and two blocks for another double-double. Weiwen Wang notched 12 kills, six digs, and two blocks.

Junior Lei Wang tallied 46 assists and 12 digs, and also scored four kills and two blocks.

Sophomore Caitlyn Vann contributed 21 digs and two aces.

Mizzou outhit Colorado .224-.165, despite being outblocked 12.5-8

Welcome Back, Klein …
Not included in the list of “technical starters” from last season is junior OH Julianna Klein (Keota, Iowa). Klein started last season on a roll, recording kill-dig double-doubles in five of her seven matches played, averaging a then-team high 4.44 kills and 2.85 digs per set, and tabulating a career-high 26 kills in the season opener at Mississippi. But, in the September 7 match versus Houston, Klein went down in the third set, tearing the ACL in her left knee – her season would be over. However, Klein has bounced back, gone through rehab, and is ready to pick up where she left off.

“Jules has had a great spring in coming back from her injury,” said Kreklow. “She's worked really hard in rehab and has consistently been ahead of all of her rehab goals, so she's really put in the time and effort in the training room to come back. I thought by the end of the spring she was close to where she was in the fall, so she's made a lot of progress off the court. She's obviously very anxious to get back out on the floor again and she's done a good job working on the little things, like her passing game. She's always been a big power hitter, and she's worked hard on the things that are going to be necessary for her to get where she wants to go if she wants to be all-conference, be an All-American player, and help us get back to the tournament again.”

Now, in this 2008 campaign, Klein is leading the Tigers in kills and has had her share of digs, as she, for the first time in ANY point in her career, is playing the full-rotational circuit.

Setting the Table Again …
Now in her fourth year in the Mizzou system, S Lei Wang (Shanghai, China) has a lot to look forward to in her redshirt-junior campaign. Having already guided the Mizzou ship in the last two years as setter, Wang has seemingly found her stride improve with each match experience. Oddly enough, her experience last year had to be tweaked a notch because of the injury to Klein. On occasion, Kreklow would utilize the 6-2 system, making Wang's play in the front row strictly at the net as a right-side hitter. Although her overall assist-per-set average was down because of the variety of positions that she had to play, Wang still recorded two triple-doubles including a 10 kill, 49 assist, and 15 dig effort versus No. 25 Oklahoma on September 29.

“I thought she had a great second half of last season,” said Kreklow. “She really came on during the month of November and into tournament time and did a real excellent job. What we've worked on during the spring has been her individual defense and blocking. I think she's got a good grasp of what is required of her as a setter and I look for that to improve.”

Crazy Eights and Zero Seniors …
What have we learned so far in 2008? If the Beijing Olympics taught us anything, it's that the number eight is a lucky number for the Chinese and in its culture, all the more evident with its beginning of the Olympic Opening Ceremony on 8-8-08 at 8:08:08 p.m.

The Missouri volleyball team in the 2008 season also wishes to employ the luck of the number EIGHT. The Tigers have been to EIGHT-consecutive NCAA Tournaments – every one of them in the decade, with Nebraska being the only other team in the Big 12 to match. For as young as the Tigers seemed last season, they return EIGHT to the team this season, five of which started in more than 20 matches last year. And, get used to the faces – there are zero seniors in 2008, meaning it will be a carbon-copy roster in 2009.

 “I look at us on paper and what we have returning, and that makes me feel positive about what we are able to do this year,” said Head Coach Wayne Kreklow. “We've got a core group – we've got a returning setter, we've got a lot of returners from last year's team back.”

The First to 25 … Wins!
Okay, new rules. For the fourth time in a decade collegiate volleyball has made a major change to the game. In 2001, scoring went from side-out to rally. In 2003, we added the libero. In 2005, the libero could serve. AND, in 2008: we play to 25. Why keep a record book anymore? By the way, that's a joke.

Sets (yes, not games – that's an NCAA-mandated change in terminology) will be played to 25 points, with the fifth set still concluding at 15 points (you still have to win by two). The NCAA is progressively becoming more consistent with the FIVB (international federation) rules, and the change in scoring is a step in that direction. What does this mean bottom line? Shorter matches and a more concentrated effort to stop scoring runs before the set becomes quickly out of hand.

In the Preseason …
Mizzou was picked to finish fifth in the Big 12 by the league coaches. Sophomore MB Weiwen Wang (Nanjing, China) was the lone Tiger selected to the Preseason All-Big 12 team.

In her role, Wang led the Tiger team last year in service aces (34), and was second on the team in kills per set (2.96), blocks per set (0.89), hitting percentage (.256), and points per set (3.78). In addition, “Wendy” was named Big 12 Offensive Player of the Week on October 8 after posting school records with 19 errorless kills and 13 total blocks in the October 3 match at Colorado. She repeated the 19 errorless kills when the Buffaloes came to Columbia on November 24.

Vann Earns Second Big 12 Honor … September 22
The Big 12 office announced on September 22 that Missouri sophomore Caitlyn Vann (Muncie, Ind.) was named as the league's volleyball Defensive Player of the Week for week of September 14-20, marking the second time that she won the honor in a span of three weeks. Vann posted a Big 12-leading 7.25 digs per set in matches against Oklahoma (Sept. 17) and Baylor (Sept. 21).  She combined for 58 digs -- 33 at Oklahoma and 25 versus Baylor -- in the Tigers' two losses Vann was also perfect in 23 service reception attempts on the week, all in the match against the Bears. 

As Maneater reporter Ross Taylor put it, “Sophomore libero Caitlyn Vann was nothing short of fantastic, or 'Vann-tastic,' a term coined by several Missouri fans to yell following her serves. […]

“With Missouri trailing 20-19 in the third set [against Baylor], Vann changed the match's momentum with a ridiculously athletic play. Diving to her right, Vann dug a well-struck ball with one arm. The ball carried over the net and landed in between six frozen Baylor defenders, helping Missouri salvage the third set.”

Vann becomes only the third Tiger to earn conference player of the week honors twice in the same season. The last was Jessica Vander Kooi who earned the award twice in September 2006.

Vann Named Big 12 Defensive Player of the Week … September 8
Missouri sophomore Caitlyn Vann (Muncie, Ind.) was named as the Big 12's volleyball Defensive Player of the Week for the week of September 1-7. Vann, collecting her first league honor, helped the Tigers to a 2-1 record in the Spring Hill Suites at Arundel Mills Invitational in College Park, Md., on September 5-6, collecting 58 digs on the weekend (5.27 dps) including a Big 12 and career-high 34 in a five-set win over St. John's.

Mizzou swept host Maryland on that Friday and won a 59-tie, 27-lead-change thriller over St. John's, a 2007 NCAA regional semifinalist, on that Saturday. Kentucky, a 2007 NCAA-Tournament team, handed the Tigers its only loss in the tourney on that Saturday morning.

Vann, the team's libero, also had double-digit dig totals in the sweep of Maryland (13) and against Kentucky (11).

Vann leads the Big 12 by a wide margin with 5.21 digs per set so far this season. Texas' Heather Kisner is next on the roll with 4.50 dps. Vann is also in the nation's top 20 in the category.

Sophomore Julianna Klein was named to the All-Tournament team at Maryland, leading Mizzou with 4.00 kills per set.

 

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