Conference News
St. Francis Wins in 5 to Beat George Mason
St. Francis Wins in 5 to Beat George MasonLoretto, Pa. - In a five game
seesaw nail biter, Saint Francis prevailed in a vicious battle, 3-2
(18-30, 30-20, 30-32, 30-28, 10-15), shocking the 12th
ranked George Mason Patriots in the Eastern Intercollegiate
Volleyball Association Tait Division clash.
Sophomore outside hitter Jordan Varee (Meadville,
Pa./Conneault Valley) set the tempo for the Flash once
again, churning out 19 kills on 32 attempts. Sophomore
Nick Rivett (Pittsburgh, Pa./Fox Chapel) put on a
show of his own, netting 18 kills on 33 swings.
Sophomore Dave Reilly (Yardley,
Pa./Pennsbury) put forth 17 kills on the 41 swats, the
most of all Red Flash spikers. Sophomore Pete Freyer
(Orchard Park, N.Y./Orchard Park) cleared seven kills on
10 attempts, on an error-free evening. Junior setter
Shane Conley (Pittsburgh, Pa./North Allegheny) put
up 57 assists en route to a .310 attacking clip for the Red Flash
(66 kills on 126 swings).
6'6" Sophomore Patrick McManamon (Huntington,
Pa./Huntington) and Conley earned the only aces for the
Red Flash. In addition, McManamon led the Flash with five
blocks in the upset of George Mason.
Rivett pulled his weight on the defensive side of the net with 10
defensive digs, leading all participants in Friday night's
match-up.
6'6 Sophomore Patrick McManamon (Huntington,
Pa./Huntington) registered Saint Francis' first point on a
sturdy block in the first game, followed by an unattested service
ace off the palm of Reilly. The Patriots poured two more
points on the board for the Flash off of two attacking errors,
allowing SFU to jump out to a 6-3 advantage. Varee pounced on
the Patriots' front line for a solid kill chased by a service ace
that corralled right off of Mason's Luke Maloney's chest.
Conley got up high for a great block and Varee made a heads up play
on a faint, errant return that fell out of bounds from George
Mason. Patriots' head coach Fred Chao decided a timeout for
his squad was appropriate, trailing 11-4 in the early moments of
game one. The Patriots scored on a missed SFU dig, but Varee
countered with another one of his infamous blasts, dividing the
Patriots defense. Rivett put his first point on the board in
game one, but the Patriots benefited off of a few misses from
SFU. Varee got the Flash back on track by whisking a soft
kill over the top of the mesh, setting the count at 16-12.
Freyer made an astute decision by reading the Patriots attack with
a block of his own, which then turned into four unforced errors
from George Mason. Chao called his second time out of game
the game with his team trailing 22-13. Mason converted on the
next point after the break from a back-and-forth volley in which
Varee made two great digs, but then turned the ball back over on a
service error. Varee fired a missile at the Patriots, posing
too much for their front line, bringing the Flash closer to a game
one victory 28-18. George Mason knocked one into their own
side of the net and Reilly closed out game one, 30-18, on a sly
poke through the Patriots' protection. Varee produced a
perfect seven-for-seven attack-to-kill ratio, manufacturing 8.5
points. Conley set up 10 assists as the Red Flash out swung
the Patriots .556 to .000.
In game two, Varee continued his quest for perfection with the
first point off of his eighth kill. McManamon mimicked Varee,
as the score became knotted at 2-2. Mason's looming 6'9 R.J.
Goubeaux pushed the Pats out to a 4-2 advantage. Mason's
Maloney and Varee exchanged service errors, making it a 6-4 George
Mason lead. The Patriots then made two consecutive blocks,
extending the score to 8-4. One of those blocks ended Varee's
perfect kill streak. Patriots outside hitter Hudson Bates
snuck an ace past a suspect SFU defense, but Reilly came back with
a point of his own to maintain a deficit of four points,
10-6. The Patriots continued their relentless pursuit,
lengthening their score by seven, 15-8. SFU head coach Mike
Rumbaugh called for a timeout once he observed George Mason had
turned the tables in the momentum department. Maloney missed
on the serve after the break, but scored on the next play. Varee
missed the hardwood again, as the Patriots jumped out to a 17-9
lead. Freyer chimed in for a fine swing right through the
heart of the Patriots wall, but Rivett missed the defensive dig,
keeping the discrepancy at eight. Mason converted on the next
two plays, but Reilly fluffed one over the net in an attempt to
fend off the mountain of points the Pats piled on.
Fortunately for George Mason's efforts, they scored on the next
three plays, amassing a 24-15 sum. Freyer and Reilly dunked
two over the lattice, as the Patriots smoked one past the inbounds
line, but Patriots Brandon McLaughlin blocked Varee's attempt to
put the score at 28-19. George Mason's Kyle Gramit killed the
next point and Hudson bates finished off the Flash in game two,
30-20, with a service ace. Reilly led the Flash's front with
four kills despite the Patriots attacking at a .455 rate.
Saint Francis put together an attacking average of .103.
R.J. Gorbeaux started off the Patriots on the right foot with his
fourth kill on the evening as Luke Maloney followed his
teammate. Mason turned it over on the serve but countered
with two more points, sprinting out to a 4-1 score. After
another SFU service miss, Gorbeaux scored again, but Rivett churned
out a laser, bringing the count to 5-3. George Mason grouped
together four consecutive points, distancing themselves from the
Flash, 10-5. Varee got back on track with a routine
pummeling, as the Flash scored the next three of four points after
the attack, bringing the tally to a 12-9 affair. McManamon
put his first ace in the stats, giving way to a joined blocked from
Varee and Freyer. Varee just missed clearing the net on his
service attempt as the score read 14-12 at the midway point, but
Freyer kept it going with two fanciful kills of his own, keeping
the Flash in it, 17-16 in favor of GMU. Rivett put one by the
Patriots, but George Mason countered with their own point.
Varee found his element in the later parts of game three, putting
together two hard kills. George Mason turned it into an even
affair, 21-21, after a service error. Four unforced errors
occurred on the next four plays, but Mason got the better of three
of them. R.J. Gorbeaux blocked Reilly's attempt, but Rivett
had his companion's back with a point of his own. Mason hit
the line on the next attempt, as the tight affair read 26-24 in
favor of GMU. Both squads swap service errors, but Freyer
drew the Flash within one on an unreturnable kill. The
Patriots scored on the next volley, but Varee took advantage of
George Mason's misjudged block. The Patriots pushed their
next attack out of bounds, evening the game at 28-28. Rivett
could not return a punishing Patriots attack, but Varee countered
as the score remained level. Conley and McManamon combined
for a block, getting the Red Flash faithful on their feet as game
three, as Saint Francis acquired their first lead of game three,
30-29. Freyer missed the serve after Chao's timeout, but
Rivett kept it alive with another kill. McManamon and Reilly formed
an air tight seal on George Mason's final attack, giving the Flash
a come-from-behind victory, 32-30, with their rousing block.
Varee once again led the charge with five kills, assisting in a
tightly contested attacking battle in which the Flash edged out the
Patriots, .375 to .333.
George Mason once again started off with the first points of the
game, but Rivett quieted their early joy with his own kill.
Reilly peppered own past the Patriots, but McManamon missed on the
next play. Rivett netted his second point in game four,
giving the Flash the early 3-2 advantage. Luke Maloney and
R.J. Goubeaux earned two consecutive blocks, but Rivett tallied his
third point as Coach Chao called for a timeout with the score
reading 5-4 in favor of the Patriots. The timeout benefited
the Flash as the converted on the next to rallies. Mason
scored next, but Varee held the lead for the Flash with his
eighteenth kill. Rivett went long on the next point, drawing
the game to a 7-7 tie. The Patriots recaptured the lead,
10-8. Varee battled back with another point, giving way to a
GMU error. Hudson Bates broke the second lead of the game,
but Varee closed it back up again with another counter,
11-11. Both teams exchanged errors on the following plays, as
Varee knocked his serve into the net. Rivett then gave game
four its fourth tie, 13-13. Freyer turned back GMU's point
with one of his own, and on the following exchange, Mason turned it
over by putting it into their net. GMU's Kyle Gramit blocked
SFU's next attack, but the Patriots couldn't handle Varee's hot
attack. McManamon tapped over SFU's second uninterrupted
point. Mason scored on an errant whack from Reilly and then
followed suit by thumping onto SFU's side of the floor, attaining
an 18-17 lead. The Patriots rattled off two more points, but
SFU gained back the serve on a GMU error. Reilly returned the
favor, with the core reading 21-19 in favor of the Pats. Each
team traded kills, but Mason kept their three point lead afloat
with another nice whack. Reilly came with a huge kill,
trimming the lead to two. GMU Gramit's cunning attempt fell
just short, but an SFU block attempt went out of bounds as the
score read 25-23. The Flash converted the same way, and the
game drew even once again after Gramit pushed in out of play.
George Mason took the first timeout in game four, going into a
huddle up by one, 26-25. After the pause, Conley put the Pats
up by two with a service error. R.J. Gorbeaux blew one by the
Flash, but Brandon McLaughlin knotted it back to 27 all on a
wayward serve. Rivett turned up the heat with a kill, pushing
the Flash up by one, but Reilly missed on the serve, tying it back
to 28-28. Rivett's attack went long and Gorbeaux concluded
yet another nail biter with a stand-up block, 30-28, favoring the
Patriots. In game four, Rivett led all Flash attackers with
seven kills in yet another intimate attacking affair. The
Patriots prevailed .265 to .231.
In the first to fifteen tie breaker, George Mason scored on another
Gorbeaux kill. McManamon countered and Reilly plastered one
past the Pats for the first three rallies of the final game.
Rivett and McManamon teamed up for a strapping block, leading to
another point by Rivett, as the Flash jumped out 4-1. Kyle
Gramit scored on the following play, but Reilly spiked one down the
pike to delete GMU's attack. Both teams bartered points, but
Rivett stayed hot, as the Flash maintained a 7-4 lead thanks to his
hard-hitting abilities. GMU assembled another error and Coach
Chao took a timeout as his squad trailed, 8-4. Two SFU errors
cut their advantage in half, but Freyer rose up for a sadistic
spike as he took over the serve with the score reading 9-6, as
Freyer remained errorless in the match. The Patriots made
another error, but made up for it with a Kyle Gramit point.
Mason put another notch on the board, but Reilly tripped up the
Patriots with a velvety kill. GMU went wide on a block
attempt, as Coach Chao took his final timeout of the match, knowing
the Flash needed just three more points to upset his
12th ranked ball club. Conley served up a ball
into the net after the breather, but GMU did the same as the score
read 13-9, SFU. Mason blasted one through the hands of
Reilly, but Mason couldn't control their block, as they put SFU on
the brink of victory. Hudson Bates plowed his own attack into
the net en route to a 15-10 victory in the final game as the Flash
uprooted their 12th ranked conference rival, 3-2 (18-30,
30-20, 30-32, 30-28, 10-15).








