Wednesday, December 17

Bruins hope to be well served for Final Four


Thursday, April 30, 1998

Bruins hope to be well served for Final Four

PREVIEW: Top team UCLA faces third-seeded Lewis in semifinal
match

By Grace Wen

Daily Bruin Staff

The teams are set.

The past is already behind them.

The UCLA men’s volleyball team has had five days to recover,
regroup and refocus for the most crucial four days of the season
and start its quest for a record 17th NCAA Championship.

The second-seeded Bruins begin the NCAA tournament tonight with
a clean slate. Though UCLA enters the Final Four with the best
record at 26-4, previous wins and losses don’t count for much now.
All that matters are the next two games.

UCLA will play the first semifinal match against third-seed
Lewis at 9:30 p.m. (PDT). The second semifinal match is scheduled
for 11:30 p.m. (PDT) and will feature top seed Pepperdine versus
No. four-seed Princeton.

The Bruins own a 5-0 record against the Flyers and have already
defeated Lewis in an earlier meeting this year.

It may not be the same old story this time around since the
return of Eduardo Quinones from injury changes the lineup.

Quinones is a 6-foot-3-inch outside hitter. The sophomore made
an impact for the team in the Midwest Intercollegiate Volleyball
Association’s conference tournament. Quinones tallied up 70 kills
in the three games, including 40 in the championship match.

But the Flyers’ path to Hawaii wasn’t a smooth flight. Lewis had
to endure a grueling three hour, five minute title game against
Loyola-Chicago. It was a match in which the Flyers set a team
record 158 kills in 274 attempts and 155 assists. The Flyers won
the game in five games – 12-15, 15-17, 15-10, 15-12, 22-20. The
come-from-behind victory earned Lewis the chance to compete for the
national title.

Helping to bring the Flyers to the tournament is Lewis standout
Victor Rivera. Rivera was named the MIVA Player of the Year. And
the junior has had a taste of individual success against the
Bruins. In the 1996 NCAA Tournament, the then-freshman had 11 kills
as he hit .450 while blocking three of UCLA’s attempts. The
following year, when Lewis extended the Bruins to five games at
Pauley Pavilion, Rivera had 30 kills, dug 12 balls and blocked
nine.

During Lewis’ west coast swing, the Flyers were missing Quinones
and other players due to injury. But the Flyers were able to take
the fourth game off UCLA. However, though its key players are back
in the mix, Lewis knows that just having Quinones back won’t mean
an easy time against the Bruins.

"We’ve got to pass well because UCLA does have some great jump
servers," Lewis head coach Dave Deuser said. "Adam Naeve, Brandon
Tagliaferro are really strong jump servers. And then we’ve got to
play good defense."

While the Flyers are planning to try and combat UCLA’s serves,
the Bruins are hoping that their servers will show up to the
semifinal match.

In its MPSF Championship loss to Pepperdine last week, UCLA
served poorly with only one ace to its 27 service errors.

But despite the fact that Lewis did take a game off UCLA last
time, the Bruins will probably advance to Saturday’s Final and meet
Pepperdine for the fourth time this season.

Last weekend’s loss may not have hurt UCLA that much since it
served as an important wake up-call.

"You can’t beat them four times in a year," UCLA head coach Al
Scates said. "We need to score against them. We sided out with them
all night."AARON TOUT/Daily Bruin

UCLA spikes the ball during a game played this weekend against
Pepperdine. Despite their loss, UCLA still has a spot in the NCAA
Tournament.


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