Conference News
Vincent Powers Princeton To Stunning 3-2 Comeback Victory Over St. Francis
Vincent Powers Princeton To Stunning 3-2 Comeback
Victory Over St. Francis
The Princeton men's volleyball team started its season
with five matches that were all decided by 3-0 scores. The Tigers
hadn't faced a dramatic moment yet, nor had they picked up a big
victory, but they took care of both in style with a thrilling 3-2
victory at St. Francis (Pa.) Saturday to split an EIVA road
weekend.
Senior middle Mike Vincent, a 2008 All-East selection, had one of
the greatest matches of his career, and he was the hero at the end.
Vincent had 21 kills on 27 swings with only two errors for a .704
attack percentage. He added six blocks, including two in
Princeton's decisive fifth-game run. Jeff McCown had 15 kills and
hit .444 for the match, while Carl Hamming overcame a tough Friday
match against Juniata with 13 kills, seven digs and a team-high
four aces, including one on match point. Freshman Vincent Tuminelli
recorded the first double-double of his career with 14 kills and 12
digs, while Brandon Denham had 68 digs and 10 assists in leading
the team to victory. Senior outside Phil Rosenberg nearly had a
double-double with 10 kills and nine digs, while senior libero
Ka'ohu Berg-Hee recorded 13 kills.
The win moves Princeton to 2-4 overall, 1-1 in the EIVA Tait
Division. Saint Francis, which had the best early-season win in the
league with a road win at 2008 finalist George Mason, fell to 5-3,
2-2.
St. Francis was one point away from victory on six different
occasions, but the Tigers always had an answer. The Red Flash took
the first two games 30-26 and 30-28, and held a 29-28 lead with a
chance to send Princeton to a disappointing 0-2 start in the
league.
That's when the magic started for Princeton, although St. Francis
helped a little early. A service error cost the Flash its first
match ball, and following a Tuminelli kill at 30-31, St. Francis
lost a third and fourth match ball on a service error. Kills from
Vincent and Tuminelli saved the fifth and sixth ones, and the
latter tied the game at 36-36. With Denham serving, Princeton was
able to fight off a pair of swings and got kills from McCown and
Tuminelli to earn an improbable 38-36 victory.
The fourth game saw St. Francis race to a 15-10 lead, but Princeton
got back into it with five of the next six points. A block by
McCown and Hamming finally evened the score at 19-19; it would
remain tied through 22-22 before Princeton went on an 8-3 run to
claim a 30-25 win. The Tigers got two kills apiece from Vincent and
Hamming during that stretch, as well as a game-winning kill from
Rosenberg.
As if that wasn't enough, there was still a game five to be played,
and that carried more than enough drama. To St. Francis' credit, it
bounced back from two crushing losses and again jumped out to a
five-point lead (10-5). Fifth games go to 15 points, so typically a
team that gets ahead by five goes on to win. Of course, a team that
holds six match balls typically wins too.
Princeton started to sideout and trailed 13-9 when it put on its
final run of the night, and it was almost all done by Vincent. A
kill and a combo block with Denham cut the deficit to 13-11. He
killed the next two balls to get the score to 13-13 and force a
timeout call. St. Francis' Alex Fortney tried to earn a seventh
match ball, but his swing was blocked by Vincent and Rosenberg, and
after more than two hours of play, Princeton had its first match
ball. Vincent never had a chance to win the final point; instead,
Hamming served up Princeton's fifth ace of the match to clinch the
win.








