USA Beach Junior Tour – Great Lakes Open 2009 – Muskegon, MI

July 15th, 2009

Click here for USA Beach Junior Tour – Great Lakes Open 2009 - Muskegon, MI result file (.pdf required)

Here are some pictures for the USA Beach Junior Tour – Great lakes Open in Muskegon, MI.

Top three places in each age group have qualified to play in the USA Beach Junior Tour Championship in Huntington Beach, CA on Sunday, August 16. Winners should register now @ www.USABeach.org

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USA Beach Junior Tour – Texas Open – Galveston, TX

July 15th, 2009

Click here for USA Beach Junior Tour – TX Open 2009 - Galveston, TX result file (.pdf required)

Here are some pictures for the USA Beach Junior Tour – Texas Open in Galveston, TX.

Top three places in each age group have qualified to play in the USA Beach Junior Tour Championship in Huntington Beach, CA on Sunday, August 16. Winners should register now @ www.USABeach.org

[flickr-gallery mode="photoset" photoset="72157621377901823"]

USA Beach Junior Tour – Delta Open 2009 – Gulfport, MS

July 15th, 2009

Click here for USA Beach Junior Tour – Delta Open 2009 – Gulfport, MS result file (.pdf required)

Here are some pictures for the USA Beach Junior Tour – Delta Open in Chicago, IL.

Top three places in each age group have qualified to play in the USA Beach Junior Tour Championship in Huntington Beach, CA on Sunday, August 16. Winners should register now @ www.USABeach.org

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USA Beach Junior Tour – Mountain Open 2009 – Vail, Co

July 15th, 2009

Results:

Click here for USA Beach Junior Tour – Mountain Open – Vail, CO (pdf required)

Here are some pictures for the USA Beach Junior Tour – Mountain Open in vail, CO.

Top three places in each age group have qualified to play in the USA Beach Junior Tour Championship in Huntington Beach, CA on Sunday, August 16. Winners should register now @ www.USABeach.org

[flickr-gallery mode="photoset" photoset="72157621385441727"]

USA Junior Tour Official Says Island A Great Stop

May 12th, 2009

By Lionel Green
The Daily News

Published May 10, 2009

GALVESTON – More than 125 two-person volleyball teams were busy diving, hitting, jumping and spiking in the sand Saturday at Stewart Beach Park.

Teenagers and preteens were competing in the Texas Open, a USA Junior Beach Volleyball Tour tournament, while many of the older players tested their skills in the Gulf Coast Volleyball Association’s “bring your mother to the beach” tournament.

Saturday’s event was the first time the USA Junior Beach Volleyball Tour had a tournament in Texas.

USA Volleyball, in conjunction with Elevation Group, created this year’s 14-city tour for participants ages 10 to 20. The tour kicked off in Gulfport, Miss., last weekend, and next travels to Muskegon, Mich.

A total of 78 teams competed Saturday. Another 49 teams played in the GCVA Mother’s Day tournament.

The majority of teams in the USA Junior tournament competed in the 16-and-under and 14-and-under age groups. The 16U featured 35 teams, and the 14U had 20. 12U and 18U teams comprised the rest of the field.

“We actually started this tour three years ago,” USA Volleyball Manager of Events Kristy Cox said. “This is the first time we’ve come to Texas. Galveston’s been a great stop. We’ve got plenty of teams, and this is one of the bigger tournaments. We’re going to Dallas in two weeks, so we’re going to Texas again.”

The USA won gold medals in men’s and women’s beach volleyball at the Beijing Summer Olympics last year, giving the sport a higher profile.

“Beach volleyball’s definitely something we’re trying to grow, so that was part of the conception of this tour three years ago,” Cox said. “Indoor volleyball is more popular, but beach is getting more popular as we go on. We’ve definitely seen growth in the tour by a hundred teams each year.”

Rick Schanz is a managing director for Elevation Group, a sports marketing company based in Cleveland.

“We’re kind of taking advantage of the Beijing bounce,” Schanz said, adding the tour sponsor is Spalding. “We’re trying to take that enthusiasm for the sport and bring it to the public and get more people involved with beach volleyball. I think it’s a great time and growth opportunity for beach volleyball.”

GCVA President Vic Clifford said the 127 total teams registered might be a record number of participants for a single-day event involving his association. GCVA operates beach volleyball leagues in League City.

“It’s bring your mom to the beach day, so we give T-shirts to moms who have players or moms who are playing,” Clifford said. “We even did that for the Junior Beach Open for all the moms who brought their kids down.”

James Rogers, 21, of Friendswood competed in the GCVA Mother’s Day tournament as an advanced beginner.

“It’s really competitive,” Rogers said. “I know I come out here and try my best, but people play for keeps out here and for reputation. The Open division plays for money. Some of the people play for their living. But it’s a great atmosphere. Everybody’s pretty much family.”

Teenagers, many who play indoor volleyball, dominated the USA Volleyball Junior tournament field.

Winners in each age group qualified for the Tour championships Aug. 16 in Huntington Beach, Calif.

Shea Elliott, 17, and Natalie Holt, 17, were teammates and won their first match.

“This is my first beach tournament,” said Elliott, a junior at Deer Park. “I think it’s a lot of fun. It’s not so technical like indoor. The court’s a lot smaller, and the wind is definitely a big factor. I’m definitely going to come back.”

Holt, a junior at Clear Brook, has competed in beach tournaments before.

“You want to win but still have fun at the same time,” Holt said.

Olivia Casavecchia, 16, and Peggy Flores, 16, are Clear Lake sophomores who grew up together.

They say the beach game is “a lot different” from indoor.

“Just being able to move and jump,” Casavecchia said. “Like the sand weighs your feet down and makes you a lot slower.”

Sisters Katelin and Hayley Koop finally got to play together at the event. Katelin, 20, plays volleyball for East Carolina University and arrived home Friday. Hayley, 17, is a junior at Klein and has committed to playing volleyball at the University of Arkansas.

“It’s a lot of fun because we never get to play with each other, and I’m 1,300 miles away,” Katelin said. “We’re really competitive, and we really don’t like to lose. It’s supposed to be fun, but we kind of take it pretty seriously.”

Hayley agreed.

“We both play volleyball, and it’s never worked out where we get to play together,” Hayley said. “My sister just recovered from having shoulder surgery and knee surgery in the last couple months. This is her first time to really play again. It’s nice for us to get to play a sport we both love and play all the time.”

Katelin is a setter for East Carolina and said the rules of the beach can be tougher on her, particularly the one restricting overhand passes.

“I have to keep telling myself, ‘Don’t use your hands,’” she said.

NCAA Approves Sand Volleyball as Emerging Sport

April 22nd, 2009

(April 21, 2009) - The NCAA Division I Legislative Council added sand volleyball to the list of emerging sports for women, it was announced today, clearing the way for schools to use the sport toward minimum sponsorship requirements and minimum financial aid awards.  NCAA Division II had already voted to add sand volleyball to the emerging sports list at the 2009 NCAA Convention in January.

NCAA Approves Sand Volleyball as Emerging SportNCAA Approves Sand Volleyball as Emerging Sport“The opportunity to play sand volleyball in the spring will spur growth in the sport. I wish I had that opportunity when I was at Stanford,” said 2008 Olympic Beach Gold Medalist, Kerri Walsh.  “Additionally, this development will give more women an opportunity for a professional volleyball career in the United States.”

Capitalizing on the recent success of USA Volleyball’s beach teams in the Olympics and the growth in grassroots programs, the NCAA’s Committee on Women’s Athletics made the recommendation to add the sport to the emerging sports list last summer.

“The United States has a proud and successful history in sand volleyball, having won at least one gold medal in every Summer Games since the discipline was added to the Olympic program in 1996,” said USAV CEO Doug Beal. “This move by the NCAA is wonderful, particularly in light of the increased varsity athletic opportunities for young women at the collegiate level and the synergy with already existing USA Volleyball programs.”

“The addition of sand volleyball as an NCAA sport will help us grow the discipline and increase its visibility around the country,” said Ali Wood Lamberson, USA Volleyball’s Director of Beach Programs. “Along with USA Volleyball’s already existing Beach High Performance and Development Programs and the USA Beach Junior Tour, NCAA sand volleyball opportunities will start young athletes looking at beach as an option much earlier in their careers.  This will help the United States sustain our level of competitive excellence.  Further, USAV is poised to support NCAA sand volleyball with various programs including coach and official education programs.”

The NCAA will call the new sport “sand” volleyball, rather than “beach” volleyball, in hopes that the sport will have broad appeal across the country and not be confined to coastal areas.  Already schools including The University of Texas, the University of Nebraska, and the University of Utah are competing in collegiate competitions in the spring.

“The addition of sand volleyball to the list of collegiate options is significant for our sport,” said Kathy DeBoer, Executive Director of the American Volleyball Coaches Association. “With more than 400,000 girls playing high school volleyball, we welcome the addition of collegiate roster spots.”

The group most responsible for spreading the popularity of the sport beyond the California coast is the Association of Volleyball Professionals (AVP) which hosts a series of competitions on man-made courts at in-land locations like Cincinnati, Ohio, Atlanta, Ga., and Las Vegas, Nev.  The AVP also sponsors a series of indoor sand competitions in January and February called “Hot Winter Nights” in cold-weather cities like Omaha, Ne. and Grand Rapids, Mich.

“We are thrilled that the NCAA has voted to make sand volleyball a collegiate sport,” said Jason Hodell, CEO of AVP Pro Beach Volleyball. “The vote confirms the momentum behind the sport of beach volleyball, and we are excited to help grow our sport on the college level and create new beach volleyball stars around the country.”

The NCAA will spend the next year developing the rules that will govern sand volleyball as a collegiate sport, including regulations on financial aid, playing dates and recruiting.  Institutions will be able to sponsor varsity programs starting in the 2010-2011 academic year.

USAV Announces Beach Junior Tour Schedule

March 11th, 2009

B.J. Hoeptner Evans – USA Volleyball February 13, 2009

The winners of the girls’ under-16 division of the 2008 USA Beach Junior Open Championships show off their medals.

B.J. Evans
Manager, Media Relations and Publications
Phone: 719-228-6800
E-Mail: bj.evans@usav.org

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. (Feb. 13, 2009) - USA Volleyball announced today the schedule for its 2009 USA Beach Junior Tour, sponsored by Spalding.

New stops for 2009 include Gulfport, Miss.; Galveston and Dallas, Texas, and Seaside, Ore.

The tour for boys’ and girls’ beach volleyball teams (no co-ed teams) ages 10-20 will include 14 stops in 12 different states in 2009. There will be an Open Championship on July 25 in Manhattan Beach, Calif., and a Tour Championship on Aug. 16 in Huntington Beach, Calif. More than 800 teams competed in the 2008 Beach Junior Tour.

“The Beach Junior Tour is a great way to get started in competitive beach volleyball,” USA Volleyball CEO Doug Beal said. “The juniors who participate in the series this year could very well be our future Olympians.”

The USA Beach Junior Tour focuses on competition and fun in a healthy environment. Players officiate their own matches and the events foster a friendly environment amongst competitors.

The tour is sanctioned by USA Volleyball and produced and operated by the Elevation Group of Companies.

For more information and to register, go to http://usavolleyball.org/event/event/1346.

2009 Tour Schedule

DATE NAME LOCATION
May 2: Delta Open (Gulfport, Miss.)
May 9: Texas Open (Galveston, Texas)
June 6: Great Lakes Open (Muskegon, Mich.)
June 7: Mid-South Open (Dallas, Texas)
June 13: Western Open (Seattle, Wash.)
June 20: Mountain Open (Vail, Colo.)
June 21: Southern Open (Fort Lauderdale, Fla.)
July 12: Gulf Coast Open (Siesta Key, Fla.)
July 25: Central Open (Milwaukee, Wis.)
July 25: USA Beach Junior Open Championships (Manhattan Beach, Calif.)
Aug. 1: North Coast Open (Chicago, Ill.)
Aug. 2: East Coast Open (Rochester, N.Y.)
Aug. 8-9: Pacific Open (Seaside, Ore.)
Aug. 16: USA Beach Junior Tour Championship (Huntington Beach, Calif.)

2009 USA Volleyball Beach Programs

February 15th, 2009

USAV Beach logo 2000.jpg

2009 USAV Beach PROGRAMS

Beach High Performance Tryouts

Open to athletes ages 14-25 (age definitions below.)  Selected athletes will comprise the Youth (U-19), Junior (U-21), and Senior A2 (U-26) Beach National Teams representing the United States in international competitions and beach high performance camps.  Beach volleyball experience is a plus but not required. All athletes will receive a written evaluation to be mailed after the camp.

Please note that international beach age classifications differ from USA Volleyball junior club age definitions and also from grade classifications of U.S. school systems.

A2 or U-26: Born between 1984-1988

Junior or U21: Born in 1989 and 1990

Youth or U19: Born in 1991 and after

Beach High Performance Tryout Dates and Information

Date Location Time Gender
April 6 Long Beach, CA 9:30 am-5:00 pm Both
May 15-16 Siesta Key, FL* 5/15, 4-7 pm & 5/16, 12-3 pm Girls
May 23 Siesta Key, FL* 9 am-12 pm & 4 pm-7pm Boys
May 23 Long Beach, CA 9:30 am-4:30 pm Girls
May 27 Long Beach, CA 9:30 am-4:30 pm Boys
May 30-31 Muskegon, MI* 5/30 8 am-12 pm or 1pm-5 pm Both (age 14-18)
May 31 Muskegon, MI 9:30 am-5:00 pm Both (age 18-25)
June 7 Long Beach, CA 9:30 am-4:30 pm Both

* see USAV Website for MI and FL tryout schedule details.

Participants:  US citizens, ages 14-25 years

Cost:  $65

Register by 5 pm the Wednesday before each event.  Click here to register for USAV camps and tryouts!

For more information go to: USAV Beach

Beach Development Camps

USAV Beach Development Camps, three day grassroots camps for boys and girls ages 12-18, are designed to teach all levels of beach volleyball athletes. Camps will be led by USAV Beach Department staff and select athletes and coaches from the AVP and FIVB tours.

With an 8:1 camper to coach ratio, emphasis will be placed on individual and small group instruction including skill development, technique, beach strategy, combating the elements, fun, and competition.  The final day will include a half day tournament with prizes awarded.  Each camper will receive a written evaluation and will be added to the USAV Beach athlete pipeline database.  Space is limited so sign up early! Cost: $250

June 12-14                 Orlando, FL                9:30 am – 4:30 pm

July 22-24                  Long Beach, CA         9:30 am – 4:30 pm

July 29-31                  Holland, MI                9:30 am – 4:30 pm

Participants:  All levels ages 12-18

Cost:  $250

Register by 5 pm the Wednesday before each event.  Click here to register for USAV camps and tryouts!

For more information go to: USAV Beach

High Performance Holiday Camp

The Beach High Performance Holiday Camp for invited elite level athletes who excel at the Beach High Performance Tryouts will be held at the Olympic Training Center in Chula Vista, CA December 28 – 30.  Ages 14-20. Details to be confirmed.  For more information contact: danalee.corso@usav.org.

USAV Beach Coaches Clinics

USAV will be hosting a five-hour Beach Coaches Clinic the day before select USAV Beach Camps and Tryouts.  Coaches will learn the technical and strategic differences between the beach and indoor disciplines, and how to design a beach practice for different group sizes.   Clinic is open to all levels, and participants should be prepared to partake in on court drills.  Tentative times are 12:00 pm to 5:00 pm.  Cost:  $50.  Coaches interested in volunteering at the camp or tryout the next day may be eligible to attend the Coaches’ Clinic free of charge.  Contact ali.wood@usav.org for details.

  • May 14, Siesta Key, FL
  • May 22, Long Beach, CA
  • May 29, Muskegon, MI
  • July 7, Orlando, FL TBC
  • July 21, Long Beach, CA TBC
  • July 28, Holland, Michigan TBC

Register by 5 pm the Wednesday before each event.  Click here to register for USAV Beach Coaches’ Clinics

For more information go to: USAV Beach

Other Programs

  • International Development Qualifiers: Open events to qualify for select FIVB and NORCECA events, all ages. March 14-15 and June 27-28, Long Beach, CA To register, go to IDQ Registration
  • USAV Collegiate Challenge: One-day tournament for women’s collegiate beach teams, April 4, Long Beach, CA.  For more information go to USAV Beach or contact Danalee Corso Danalee.corso@usav.org

Contact USAV Beach Programs: 222 N. Sepulveda, Suite 2000 El Segundo, CA 90245 Ph (310) 364-5214 Fax: (310) 364-5213.  Beach Programs Admin Asst: Stephen Caselli Stephen.caselli@usav.org Head Coach of Beach Jr. National Team: Danalee Bragado-Corso Danalee.corso@usav.org USAV Director of Beach Programs: Ali Wood Lamberson Ali.wood@usav.org