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Schermerhorn, Quiggle get back into competitive mindset with win at the Sunshine Series

To a normal person, and even a normal beach volleyball player, it has not been all that long since Sarah Schermerhorn has played in a beach volleyball tournament. The 33-year-old played in one just three months ago, in Itapema, Brazil. But three months without a tournament is, to Schermerhorn, not just three months. It's an eternity, "probably the longest I've ever gone since I started playing beach without playing a tournament,' she said.

This past weekend, Schermerhorn alas satiated that hunger to compete, winning the fourth and final stop of the Sunshine Series, held in Clearwater, Fla., with Corinne Quiggle, defeating familiar foes in Kim Hildreth and Kaya Marciniak in the finals.

"It was our intro back into that competition mindset," Quiggle said. "We really wanted to be in tournament situations. It was nice to see ourselves in game situations. It's been a while since November, so before we go to Mexico, which will be a big tournament, it's nice to have that under our belts."

Indeed, they have just two weeks remaining in what could be labeled their pre-season block before the international season begins. During the week of March 13, they'll travel to Tlaxcala, Mexico, for the first Volleyball World Beach Pro Tour Challenger event. The stakes will be high enough in Mexico with a single-elimination qualifier to start, which isn't something they wanted to do without first feeling the nerves and adrenaline that only competition can bring.

"For me, having gone so long without playing in a tournament, I really realized the difference between a practice mindset and a playing mindset," Schermerhorn said. "In the past, I'd practice for a week, play on the weekend, practice for the week, play on the weekend, it was a constant switching back and forth. But this season, I've definitely seen more segmentation. It's been interesting to see there is such a difference in that mindset and it takes an adjustment period to switch from one to the other. In practice you get a little bit more time to analyze, to work through things that aren't going well. A lot of what we're working on is not judging ourselves, but when you get into competition, you have to go a lot quicker. You have to go from one play to the next without a lot of reflection. You have to let things go and move on." 

They moved on well enough, topping a strong field that included Hildreth and Marciniak, Adrianna Nora and Pri Lima, Julia Colina and Jessica Wilson, Bree Scarbrough and Aurora Davis, and Lydia Smith and Kelly Wood.  

"You play scrimmages but there's something about getting on the court and being in a tournament situation where it's a little bit different mindset, little bit different pressure, five matches in a day," Schermerhorn said. In Mexico, they won't see anywhere close to that type of physical demand. Volleyball World typically caps days at a maximum of three matches, which made Clearwater the perfect combination of training and competition cardio and match pressure, a feat of endurance in live situations.

"For me it felt like a training camp where it's just volleyball, lifting, film, rest, eat, sleep, it was awesome," Quiggle said. "We finished it off with that tournament at the end, come back for two weeks, get some competition [in California], then head to Mexico."

While none of the men will be headed to Mexico, the field was still a full one. Andrew Royal and Ethan Elkins took first, beating Justin Phipps and Joseph Reysen in the finals. Austin Banks and Spencer Gaston, and Bradley Bozeman and Kyle Ohman claimed third. In fifth were Kameron Beans and Brad Connors, and Thomas Hurst and Caleb Blanchette.

The juniors, too, were in Clearwater last weekend, as the Sunshine Series was also a 2-Star tournament as well as an open one. Katie Miller and Cambrie Riffe won the 18U Division, while Kailey Kleinatland and Bailey Higgins took second, and Emma Braticevic and Samantha Crosby, and Ashli McKenny and Lauren Cairo placed third. The 16U Division was won by JT McCormick and Diego Saavedra for the boys, and Piper Noelle Pitchford and Sophie Lyen for the girls. Maverick Moore and Logan Chase placed second, as did Olivia Hoyt and Thais Treumann. Rounding out the semifinalists were Luis Fernando Campo and Luis Eduardo Campo for the boys, and Andrea Kryak and Elizabeth Nye, and Cassidy Dart and Joelynne Luis for the girls.

The 14U Division was won by Izzy Ramos and Christy Boulware, who beat Dior Ferguson and Gabrielle Hernandez in the finals. Placing third were Skye Douglass and Rosabella Palanti, and Ansley Harpin and Maisie Allen. The 12U tournament was won by Danica Waterman and Mila Zujovic, who defeated Payton Cavanaugh and Isalina Heagle. In third was Alyssa Onorato and Victoria Samolej.

All first through third place teams were awarded bids to AVP Junior Nationals and NJ Beach Week.

~Travis Mewhirter @trammew


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AVP America Grand Prix, the Christmas bonus of beach volleyball

U.S.A. - Feb 28, 2022 - Wayne Gant and AVP America are not the ones who invented the grand prix style reward system in beach volleyball. Its a concept old enough, and something that had already been widely adopted by the time Gant got involved in the sport, that he honestly has no idea who came up with it.
"That started pre AVP America, pre Volley America, said Gant, who is the Executive Director at AVP America. The concept was started before me honestly."
While the original source of the system may forever remain unknown, what can be stated with certainty is this: AVP Americas Grand Prix is the only organization using such a system on a nationwide scale, rewarding amateur and up and coming professional beach volleyball players both for the quantity and quality of their play throughout the entirety of a season.

"It's cool to have that reward for the whole season," AVP professional beach volleyball player, Logan Webber, said. "It makes it feel like it's a season-long thing rather than individual tournaments by themselves."

In every professional point system, used by organizations from Volleyball World to the AVP to continental tours such as NORCECA and CEV, players' points are based on a type of average finish. The Volleyball World rankings, for example, are based on the player's best three out of his or her four most recent finishes. The AVP uses the best four of six. This isn't so with the Grand Prix. Players simply continue to accrue points, in every event they play throughout the season. Win an event and you're rewarded with 40 points. Take second, add 25 to your total. Third, 15. Down the list it goes. The more events you play, the more points you accrue; the more points you accrue, the higher you climb up the Grand Prix standings; the higher you climb, the bigger your reward at the end of the season.

More than $100,000 in cash and merchandise is sent annually to players in the top finishers of their respective divisions open, AA, A, B and zones.
"When they're behind a couple spaces they need to play an extra event because its a point system, it's not an average," Gant said. "This isn't a rewards program for the best players or the ones who play the most, its the ones who play the most often and do well. It's not saying 'You're the best.' It's treating our loyal customers and rewarding those who do well."

And it's rewarding those who do well in their specific zone. Similar to how Volleyball World is split into five continental tours, AVP America has split the country into five zones West, Central, Midwest, Southeast, Northeast. At the end of the Grand Prix season, the victors can lay claim on bragging rights as the champion of their zone.
"The whole concept is cool," said Webber, who finished first in the Midwest zone during the 2020-2021 Grand Prix, beating out Jeff Samuels by a whopping 1,507 points. "It's a cool way to define who was the best in that area or who had the best season in that area, it's a very regimented way to get that number. It could be a special thing for people who just play qualifiers to go and try to win their zone instead of focusing on the two or three events per year they could try and qualify for."

For how widespread and popular the Grand Prix is, it's one of the more unknown aspects of AVP America. "Nobody really knows its a thing," Webber said. Yet on Friday afternoon, hundreds of players were sent emails, informing them that they'd be receiving either checks or gift certificates -- perhaps as a pleasant surprise for finishing in the top in the Grand Prix of their zone and division. For some, it's an unexpected reward for playing dozens of tournaments across the country.
Moving forward, it could be the reason a player decides to compete in an extra event here, travel to a tournament there, in an attempt to get back into the top 25.

"It's like doing your job well and at the end of the year you get your Christmas bonus, but it's in January," said Evan Cory, who won the Mountain West zone in 2020-2021, topping Ian Bicko for first. "Although Im phasing out of the system a little bit with bigger events and focusing on the major stops, I feel like the AVP America grass roots system has been pivotal to my success so far. It has allowed me to travel to new places, meet new people, and compete against the best people from every region in the country. "Without this Grand Prix system, I wouldnt know of the top tournaments around and wouldn't have been able to compete against top notch competition from every corner of the country." And he wouldnt have been able to get paid doing it.

For more information about the 2022 Grand Prix head over to the Grand Prix points structure page.

~Travis Mewhirter @trammew


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Fourth and final stop of the Sunshine Series highlights big weekend for juniors

Clearwater Beach, FL Feb 25, 2022 - Rich Heiles recently shoveled two feet of snow just to get his car out of his driveway in Hampton Bays, New York. Yes, it's frigid on the northern East Coast this time of year, with temperatures regularly plummeting into the single digits. These past four weeks, he's been doing no such thing. The temperatures will not be anywhere near the single digits. He might very well don a t-shirt and board shorts. Life in the winter isn't so bad when youre the director of the Sunshine Series. 

February has become the official month of the Sunshine Series, a crop of four tournaments on consecutive weekends, one angled towards men, one to women, one to juniors, and another to amateurs. It made for an easy, if not attractive, name for the cluster of events, which will come to a close this weekend with its fourth and final stop, held at Pier 60 in Clearwater Beach, Fla.

The Sunshine Series' final tournament, which begins this Saturday, is the largest juniors tournament being put on this weekend, the lone 2-Star with more than 30 teams registered for the girls 18U division, 25 and counting for 16U, and 23 for 14U. 

Leading the seeding for the 18U division is Emma Braticevic and Samantha Crosby, Madeline Sides and Olivia Whisnant, and Katie Miller and Crambrie Riffe; the 16U is headed by Olivia Hoyt and Thais Treumann, Caelan Chesser and Senna Thayer, and Andrea Kryak and Elizabeth Nye; and the 14U division is topped by Isabelle Ramos and Christy Boulware, Dior Ferguson and Gabrielle Hernandez, and Gigi Phillips and Ashton Kirton. There are even a handful of 16U boys teams signed up, led by Maverick Moore and Logan Chase, JT McCormick and Diego Saavedra, and Luis Fernando Campo and Luis Edward Campo.

While the Sunshine Series is the only 2-Star of the weekend, eight organizations are hosting 1-star juniors tournaments. Up the East Coast in Fort Mill, South Carolina, Charlotte Beach is hosting its Winter Warmup, a 1-Star event led by Addison Beaver and Gabriella LaPata in the 18U division and Samantha Sprague and Abigail Fallin in 16U.  

At Birmingham Beach in Pelham, Alabama, 16 girls are signed up for the Queen of the Beach, led by Stella Yester, Addie Holden, and Mabrey Whitehead. 
Seeding and registrations have yet to be reported for 1-Star tournaments being held at 210 Beach, SR1 Volleyball, Sandstorm Beach Volleyball Club, and SSOVA. While the entry list for a 1-Star tournament at Santa Barbaras East Beach is also not up, East Beach Academy director and professional beach volleyball player Katie Spieler expects excellent play from Portia Sherman and Chloe Hoffman, Addison Low and Alina Stapf, Kara Namimatsu, and John Thomas Hanson and Sebastian Daste.

~Travis Mewhirter @trammew



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Presidents Day Weekend a big one in juniors beach volleyball

U.S.A, Feb 22, 2022 - Presidents Day isnt exactly the most widely celebrated of American holidays. Poll your average American and youd be hard pressed to find many who would know when it occurs on the calendar. But still, popular or not, whether or not the vast majority of us are aware that it occurs annually on the third Monday of every February, what Americans do know is this: Presidents Day offers a day off of work, which means a long weekend. Which means theres an extra day for, say, a beach volleyball tournament.

Organizations and players alike took advantage of the long Presidents Day weekend, as seven AVP America Junior National Qualifiers were held across the country, and dozens more tournaments of all levels were hosted as well.

There were 2-Star tournaments held in Port St. Lucie, Florida and Gilbert, Arizona, featuring packed entry lists, and another five 1-Stars, held in Florida, Ohio, Hawaii, and two in Texas. While results are still to be reported from four of those events, 26 bids to Junior Nationals, which will be held on July 5-10 in Hermosa Beach, California, were awarded.

At the Sand Club Junior Beach Series in Arizona, Rebecca Drake and Sophia Notaro won gold in the 18U division, while Kobie Fowler and Calliandra Otjen claimed the top spot in 16U and Erin Clark and Brenna Walsh were the victors of 14U. Silver medals were awarded to Liana Huesca and Sarah Lewis (18U), Ava Kretschman and Ryley Nelson (16U), and Bailey Kealy and Sienna Logsdon (14U). In 2-Star tournaments, bids to Junior Nationals are also awarded to the third-place finishers, which were Isabella Avelar and Emma Soncrant, and Lucianna Alexander and Isabella Reyes (18U), Kylie Helm and Isabella Reyes, and Audra Gorder and Sydney Schmidtke (16U), Violet McArthur and Savannah Waite, and Mira Banks and Leah Legg (14U).

Likewise, at Altitude Volleyball, located in Port St. Lucie, Florida and a host of a 2-Star event, eight bids were awarded, headed by the gold medalists, Olivia Chychrun and Rhea Kohl (18U), and Kyle Mcguirk and Elena Lam (16U). Silvers were earned by Thalie Brossard and Skye Tiedemann (18U) and Zoe Taylor and Allison Spittal (16U). Bronzes were scooped up by Ellie Neville and Ava Lilliquist, and Ryla Bryant and Erin Miller (18U), Gabrielle Bissell and Ashlee TenKley, and Brielle Dorish and Catherine Hamilton (16U).

Two 1-Star events reported results, at Nona Sports in Orlando, Florida, and ASC Sand in Cedar Park, Texas. Only the first- and second-place finishers are awarded bids to Junior Nationals, and in Orlando, Emerson Moss and Macie Sinclair defeated Emalee Semple and Ella Williams in the finals. In Cedar Park, Arden Besecker and Ava Patton triumphed over Charlie Haynes and Tylee Shires in the 18U division, while Aubrey McBride and Haylee Wright defeated Reese and Reagan Ruecker for the 16U title. Results are still pending from 1-Star events at Edge Performance, Relentless Volleyball, 692 Beach, and Vollis Beach.

~Travis Mewhirter @trammew



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Bids for Junior Nationals on the line across the country this weekend

U.S.A., Feb 18, 2022 - It's been 30 degrees in Tallahassee, Fla. lately. A little chilly by the standards of Jeremy Edge, a longtime resident of Fort Lauderdale who has since relocated to Northwest Florida, where he runs Edge Performance Beach Volleyball Club. As for the kids in Tallahassee, however?  "They're used to it. When the kids go out for PE, they're in shorts and tank tops," Edge said. "I don't understand. I don't know. So be it."


Cold or warm, rainy or sunny, there is beach volleyball to be played. And juniors all over the country, either in indoor facilities or on the beach, are competing every weekend, vying for bids to AVP Junior Nationals, held July 5-10 this year.


Bids for Junior Nationals, a monstrous tournament featuring the top juniors from around the United States that will be held once more in Hermosa Beach, California, have been awarded beginning as early as December of 2021. Players can earn them from either placing first or second in an AVP America 1-star event, or from finishing in the top four in a 2-star event, like the one being held at the Sand Club in Gilbert, Arizona.


This weekend, bids are on the line across the country, from Port St. Lucie, Florida up to Edge's club in Tallahassee, from Lewisville, Texas to across the desert in Arizona at The Sand Club, even all the way to Queen's Beach on the Hawaiian island of Oahu. Because when bids are on the line, the events fill up.


"It's pretty cool. The kids love it. It's kind of like winning a bid to the Olympics for them," said Edge, who expects big things from Landyn Snowden, Olivia Edge, Bailey Hope, and Kelsey Swart, among others, this summer. "They hold the paper up, theyre smiling, theyre cheering, theyre going to a championship."


And they can begin competing for those Olympic moments now. Forty-one total teams, split between U18 and U16,  have signed up for the Altitude Volleyball Showcase and 2-Star Junior Qualifier, held in Port St. Lucie, Florida, on February 19. The U18 division is headed by Emma Braticevic and Kendra Brown, Ellie Neville and Ava Lilliquist, and Olivia Chychrun and Rhea Kohl. Leading the seeding for the U16 division is Kylee Mcguirk and Elena Lam, Zoe Taylor and Allison Spittal, and Danielle Hernandez and Molly Marsh.


"We are extremely lucky to have great weather to compete so early in the season," said Kaya Marciniak, a professional player who coaches at Altitude Academy. "The last tournament [at Singer Island] gave us a chance to prepare for our Altitude Volleyball college showcase this weekend."


At 692 Beach in Lewisville, Texas, 20 total teams are registered, split between three divisions. The Relentless qualifier, held in Queen's Beach, is completely full, as is all but the boys U18 division at the Sand Club. 


It is easy to see why events like AVP Junior Nationals are such an allure. It's hosted in Southern California, the mecca of beach volleyball. The juniors will be playing on the same courts used by the professionals, often playing and practicing directly next to them. It presents a rare opportunity to play alongside the tier of athlete the juniors aspire to become. 


"Nationals is just huge. There are a lot of kids there, Edge said. "It's really neat to have a lot of pro teams playing while the kids are playing. When they're done playing, they get to go watch them. A lot of pro tournaments, they dont have a lot of kids coming up to watch. It's mostly adults. It's pretty neat for the kids to see that if you work hard, you could play at that level. It's a possibility. To see it up close and personal is a huge encouragement. It speaks for itself, seeing the percentage of growth in the game of beach."


Registrations are limited, so players are encouraged to sign up early, and book their hotels, which fill up fast, well in advance.

Registration is open at avpamerica.com


~Travis Mewhirter @trammew


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For Dave Palm, there's just something about those New Jersey guys


Singer Island, FL, Feb 15, 2022: - There's just something about those New Jersey guys. The best two-year stretch of Dave Palm's beach volleyball career came partnered with Eric Zaun, a New Jersey native. Together, the two would win three National Volleyball League titles in 2015 and 2016, becoming one of the most formidable teams on tour. This weekend, partnered with Chris Vaughan, another New Jersey guy: Vaughan is from Medford, Zaun from Cherry Hill; the two were close friends, Palm won another, the second stop of East End Volleyball's Sunshine Series, beginning the 2022 season on a victorious note. 

 
"There's something about the Jersey people that I play well with," Palm, 31, said, laughing. 


To be clear, Vaughan currently lives in Philadelphia, not New Jersey. Regardless, be it Jersey or Philly, its a long way from Singer Island, Florida long enough that Vaughan and Palm didn't get a practice in prior to their first match on Saturday. It showed, too: Palm and Vaughan lost their first set of the tournament, setting them up for what could have been a very long road through the contenders bracket or a very short weekend. They more than recovered, winning that first match before marching through the rest of the tournament without dropping another set, beating a host of formidable teams in the process: Adam Roberts and Will Hoey, Caleb Kwekel and Max Martin, TJ Jurko and Adam Hartmann, Seain Cook and Logan Webber.  


"[Palm's] great. So good. Awesome," Vaughan said. "Our styles of play meshed well strategy-wise, which was cool. He's a little quiet and I'm cool being the hype guy. It lined up pretty well. He's a really good setter so he was able to run all of the stuff I needed."


And Vaughan was, indeed, running a lot of different sets, mostly by necessity. By his estimation, he was served virtually every ball throughout the weekend, "and I am not used to that Florida heat", he said. What he is used to is an indoor facility near his house in Philadelphia where he trains once a week with Shane Donohue, Kris Fraser, and any other locals they can round up. Even though he and Donohue won a tournament two weeks ago, seeing plenty of serves in the process, its still a shock to the system to play five matches in Florida heat in two days, especially when your body is more accustomed to sub-freezing temperatures and snow, not sand, on the ground.


He managed just fine, crediting Montucky Cold Snacks for keeping him fueled throughout. It helped, too, that Palm did much of the defensive work for them, blocking three consecutive balls in the finals against Webber and Cook, which they won, 21-17, 21-15. "It was nuts. I was like, 'Alright, we just need to side out,'" Vaughan said. And side out they did, looking very much like a former partnership that included Palm and a Jersey guy.


True to form, in their championship photo, no smiles were allowed, for smiles, as Zaun was fond of saying, are a sign of weakness.
Aside from a single awkward set on Saturday, there were no signs of weakness from Vaughan and Palm. "I'm not making much of it because its still pre-season but its still a good motivator, gives me something to make sure I'm still hitting the gym consistently for, doing my vertical program, Vaughan said. I'm just like Shut up, you haven't done anything yet!"


On the womens side, Kim Hildreth avenged a loss in the previous Sunshine Series finals in Siesta Key, partnering with Kaya Marciniak to defeat Jade Race and Megan Rice. Its the first win of the year for Hildreth, who has become accustomed to doing much of it on tours and in tournaments of all shapes and sizes, from the East End she won this weekend. to previous Dig the Beaches, to AVPNexts. 


"Good to get in tournament situations early in the season to put things from practice into game situations," Hildreth said. "Rich [Heiles] always runs a great tournament, always fun to play with one of your best friends."


For Race, who is currently engaged to Adam Roberts, it was a seminal moment: Just her second final in an AVP America event, and certainly the most difficult. She won her pseudo-home tournament, the Myrtle Beach Open, this past fall with Sarah Schermerhorn, but to make a final in Florida, with a steeper field, was no small accomplishment. "This off-season has been good to me," she said.


For full results, head to AVPAmerica.com


~Travis Mewhirter @trammew



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AVP Releases Grass, Junior and Semi-Pro Tour Schedules


Irvine, CA, February 9, 2022: Less than a week ago, the AVP alluded, in an auspicious Instagram post, that the summer was about to get a lot longer. And on February 4, it was confirmed that the summer did indeed get substantially longer, as 16 events, the most in a single season since 2009, populate a schedule that will stretch from May to November.

And if the summer is looking a good deal longer, its also about to become a good deal fuller. AVP America, host/partner to thousands of volleyball events across the United States every year, will continue to fill out the schedule for the amateurs, juniors, and a booming rising crop of professionals.  

So successful, in fact, have the largest events under the AVP America umbrella been that seven previous AVP America events were elevated to the AVP Tour Series, and another two were promoted to the AVP Pro Series. 

"We were left with a big void of AVPNext Events," AVP America Director Wayne Gant said. "Which only made room for more."

Already, AVP America has established new AVPNext events, featuring at least $20,000 in prize money, in San Antonio, Texas (May 21-22), Racine, Wisconsin (July 16-17), Seaside, Oregon (August 13-14), and Laguna Beach, California (September 10-11). One, potentially two, more events are in the works to be added. That, of course, goes alongside the $50,000 in prize money per event for the AVP Tour Series, which is adopting the format of the former AVPNext Gold Events for, at least, this upcoming season. 

"It's definitely getting busier, which is our goal," Gant said. "I think things are moving quite well and the future is very bright. Players coming up through the ranks now will really have something to look forward to in the coming years."

And that's not just on the beach, either. It was only two years ago that the AVP began expanding its programming to include the large-scale grass events as a featured element of it's amateur tour. Those featured events included the traditional grass mainstays the Pottstown Rumble and the famed Clash and a few others, but still, there were limited opportunities for grass players to compete for major purses. Now, the Grass Tour features six massive events: The Clash ($20,000), Pottstown ($70,000), The Dig ($20,000), The Smash ($25,000), Greenville Open ($20,000), and Grass Nationals ($25,000) -- $180,000 in total prize money. 

Opportunities abound for the juniors, too. Six events, projected to begin in Muskegon, MI and concluding in late November in Clearwater Beach, Florida, fill out a Juniors Tour that will stop in five different states, and the coveted Junior Nationals will be held in Hermosa Beach, California, July 5-10.

In between all of this the AVP Gold, Pro, and Tour Series, the AVPNext Tour, the Grass Tour, the Juniors Tour are all of the usual AVP America haunts, as well.

There is the AVP America Big Money Tour, adding eight confirmed events and another $45,000 in prize money. Gant expects that number to swell as well, projecting potentially 20 tournaments with up to $200,000 total in prize money.

Non-existent is the weekend that does not feature outdoor volleyball of some kind. 

Indeed, this summer is a long one, in the best of ways, for beach and grass volleyball players.

And its a full one. 

~Travis Mewhirter @trammew