Conference News
Top-ranked Stanford Claims 2010 Mens Volleyball Championship
Top-ranked Stanford Claims 2010
Men’s Volleyball Championship
With 3-0 Victory Against Penn State
STANFORD, Calif., May 8, 2010 – Playing in the NCAA
Men’s Volleyball Championship match for the third time in the
past five years, No. 12 Penn State fell one win short in its bid
for a third national title, falling to top-ranked Stanford, 30-25,
30-20, 30-18 on the Cardinal’s home floor.
The No. 3 seed,
Penn State finished with a 24-8 mark, while No. 1 Stanford improved
to 24-6 in front of 6,635 in Maples Pavilion. The Nittany Lions
were looking to add to their NCAA Championships from 1994 and 2008,
while the Cardinal won its second, joining the 1997 crown. Despite
the loss in the title match, the Penn State men’s and
women’s volleyball teams have combined to win four of the
last six NCAA Championships.
Stanford became the first team to win the NCAA men’s
volleyball championship on its home floor since UCLA in 1996. Penn
State will host the 42nd NCAA Men’s Volleyball Championship,
May 5 & 7, 2011 in Rec Hall. The Nittany Lions last served as
NCAA host in 2006.
Two of the nation’s premier athletic departments battled it
out on the men’s volleyball court for the first time in NCAA
Championship competition. The Nittany Lions had won the last
meeting, 3-0, on Feb. 11, 2006 at the Hall of Fame Classic in
Springfield, Mass. Penn State still leads the series, 5-3.
The Nittany Lions were making their 12th consecutive NCAA
Tournament appearance and advanced to their sixth NCAA Championship
match after defeating No. 3 Cal State Northridge in three sets
(30-21, 30-23, 30-28) in the national semifinals on Thursday.
Stanford was making its first NCAA Championship appearance since
1997. The Cardinal defeated Ohio State in its semifinal, 3-0
(30-25, 30-26, 30-17).
For Stanford, sophomore Brad Lawson had a match-high 24 kills on
.821 hitting. Junior Spencer McLachlin had 12 kills, while senior
Evan Romero was third on the team with 11. Senior Kawika Shoji
guided the Cardinal to a .495 attack percentage with 47 assists and
tied for first on the team with brother Erik Shoji with 10 digs.
Senior Garrett Werner led the team in blocks with six total.
For Penn State, senior Will Price (Gaithersburg,
Md.) led the Nittany Lions wth 15 kills, while redshirt sophomore
Joe Sunder (Greensburg, Pa.) put down 12 and
senior Max Lipsitz (Williamsville, N.Y.) had 10.
Redshirt sophomore setter Edgardo Goas (San Juan,
Puerto Rico) tallied 38 assists and junior libero Dennis
Del Valle (Toa Alta, Puerto Rico) led the lions with 12
digs. Three Nittany Lions posted two blocks apiece, including
Lipsitz, Price and Sunder.
Lawson and K. Shoji were named co-Most Outstnading Players of the
NCAA Championship. Price, K. Shoji, E. Shoji, Sunder, Lipsitz and
Lawson were all named to the NCAA Championship All-Tournament
team.
The Nittany Lions opened the 2010 NCAA National Championship with a
service error, but a Goas kill and a Wolf ace had Penn State
leading 2-1. The Cardinal tied it up at 2-2, but a kill by Price
and a triple block by Goas, Turko and Sunder kept PSU in front,
4-3. A 3-0 Stanford run gave the Cardinal a 6-4 edge, but the Lions
answered back with a 4-0 run to take a two-point lead, 10-8. Sunder
and Lipsitz each had a kill in the run, while Stanford notched two
attack errors. The Lions maintained control of the lead until a
kill by Stanford’s Spencer McLachlin and a Cardinal stuff had
the set knotted at 13-13. Two Turko kills sandwiching a PSU error
had Penn State in the lead, 15-14, midway through the frame.
Stanford used a 3-0 run, including back-to-back services aces from
Lawson to move back into the lead, 17-15. A PSU block and two
straight Lion kills allowed Penn State to tie it up at 18-18. The
score tied once more before a Lawson kill and a Cardinal block had
Stanford leading 23-20. After a Nittany Lion timeout,
Stanford’s lead grew to four, 24-20. A Cardinal error and a
Price kill had Penn State within two, 24-22, but Stanford recorded
the next two points to send Penn State to the bench for the second
time. Price posted one kill and Lipsitz put down two, but Stanford
closed out the first set, 30-25, with a kill from Evan Romero.
Penn State took a 6-3 lead to open set two. A Lipsitz kill and two
Stanford errors put the Lions up 3-1 to start before another
Stanford error and two Penn State kills increased the Lion lead to
three. The Cardinal fought to within one, 6-5, but a 4-0 PSU run
had the Nittany Lions leading by five, 10-5. However, a 6-2
Stanford run put the Cardinal within one of tying the set.
Following a PSU timeout, a kill by Mclachlin tied the set at 12-12.
A 3-0 run, including a Lipsitz/Price stuff, a Sunder kill and a
Price ace, put PSU ahead, 15-13. Stanford did not back down and
used a 4-0 run for a 17-15 advantage. The Nittany Lions fight to
within one, 17-16, but it would be the closest the Lions would get
to the Cardinal for the remainder of the set. The Cardinal allowed
Penn State just four additional points before closing out the set,
30-20. Sunder and Price each tallied a kill for the Nittany Lions
and their other two points came on Stanford errors.
Stanford grabbed a 6-3 lead to start set three and despite kills
from Lipsitz and Price, the Cardinal increased the gap to four,
9-5. A Sunder putdown following a Penn State timeout, but a 3-0
Stanford run had the Cardinal up by six, 12-6. Stanford’s
lead increased to seven, 14-7, before the Lions began to fight
back. A 4-1 PSU run with back-to-back kills by Lipsitz and a Price
ace had PSU within four, 15-11. After a Stanford timeout, the
Cardinal recorded the next three points forcing Penn State to head
to the bench. Stanford’s momentum continued to grow as Lawson
put down three for Stanford as they rocketed to a 25-15 lead.
Lipsitz and Sunder each pounded kills for PSU, but the Lions were
unable to steal any momentum from the Cardinal. Lawson slammed the
final kill for Stanford to win the championship.








