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Wisconsin volleyball team heads to beach
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Also by Greg Schmitz:
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- Baseball should open in warmth (April 1, 2008)
- Big cleats to fill (March 25, 2008)
- Defense key to Brewers season (March 25, 2008)
Related Stories:
- Volleyball team continues spring season (April 7, 2003)
- One last shot for Badger seniors (March 23, 2007)
- Volleyball team looks to keep spring streak alive in Windy City (April 1, 2005)
- Spring volleyball season returns to Madison (March 24, 2006)
- UW's spring 'challenge' concludes (April 27, 2007)
by Greg Schmitz
Wednesday, April 2, 2008
Every spring the University of Wisconsin volleyball team
prepares for the upcoming season by working on conditioning and deciding which
players will replace the graduating seniors.
While the Badgers are again doing both of those things this
spring, the team has a different approach to their training.
UW hit the ground running during a trip to San Diego over
spring break. While the team was out in California, head coach Pete Waite put
his players through three hours of conditioning and stretching before they
faced San Diego State in a five-game match, and Wisconsin won four of the five
matches against the Aztecs.
“It was more about getting our bodies realigned. We did a
lot of different kinds of stretches combined with conditioning that made our
hips aligned with our legs,” senior middle blocker Audra Jeffers said. “Now
people are out here making a lot stronger movements and getting to different balls.
We definitely are seeing a change and, with different drills that we have been
doing, more stamina from everybody.”
Once the Badgers got back to Madison they began a training
program different from any they had ever been through. Instead of practicing
five days a week in the UW Field House on the hard court, Waite now has
alternated his training schedule, switching back and forth between the hard
court and the sand court they have set up in an empty warehouse off campus.
“It makes you a lot quicker, and you can see the court so
much better,” junior outside hitter Brittney Dolgner said about training in
sand. “Your teammates can see the court better, and they can tell you what kind
of shots to hit, blocking, and serving and everything.”
In the short time the players have been training on the
beach, Waite has already noticed the improvements in his players when they
bring the game back to the Field House.
“Their ball control is much better,” Waite said. “You got
people who are middle blockers and never play back row are back there passing
and playing defense. You got the defensive specialists who normally don’t get
to hit have to pass and then go hit. You have Nikki Klingsporn who, as a
setter, usually doesn’t hit. She’s back there passing and hitting.
“All of their games are going to be much more balanced. It
really has been motivating them to be stronger and better, and it has been fun
to watch.”
For the players, alternating between the beach and the hard
court has made spring practice more exciting, as the sand has broken up the
sometimes monotonous schedule this time of year.
“It definitely does (make spring more exciting),” Dolgner
said. “It makes school go faster, too, which is nice. You are always looking
forward to a different kind of practice that you are not used to. We’ve never
done the beach thing, so it makes it a lot faster and a lot of fun.”
“It’s almost like cross training,” Waite said. “You’re not
bored with one thing where you are going five days a week just in the same
spot. The sand is very different.”
One of the main reasons the Badgers are training in the sand
this season is to prepare for the third annual AVCA/CBS Collegiate Beach
Championship, which they will participate in April 18-20 in San Diego. And
while Waite already sees how training in sand has improved his team, he sees
the move to the sand as a way volleyball is becoming even more of a year-round
sport.
“The coaches association is talking about a beach spring
season,” Waite said. “A lot of schools would have beach tournaments, and
players would go from the hard court to sand. It would increase television
exposure because it’s a whole new sport out there, and it’s very big at the pro
level. We are trying to push for it, and it is something that is really showing
[to be] improving our team also.”
Another reason for the training this spring is so the
Badgers don’t suffer another letdown in the NCAA Tournament like they did last
year in a loss to Iowa State at home in the second round.
“I still think about it for sure,” Jeffers said about their
second-round defeat. “Nobody wants to end a season like that. It’s great to
have one more year where we could end on a good note.”
“They were dealing with a lot of injuries that made it hard
for them to be as good as they can be at the end,” Waite said. “That’s very
tough. The big part of what we are doing is making sure they are all healthy at
this point. Getting them healthy and making them stronger. That’s what they are
doing right now.”
While the rotation is not set yet, the rapid improvement in
his players this spring will help Waite better prepare his team to move forward
without one of the most successful senior classes in school history.
The quintet of Taylor Reineke, Jackie Simpson, Jocelyn Wack,
Megan Mills and Amanda Berkeley led the Badgers to two Elite Eight appearances
and 99 wins in four years. However, the training program UW is going through
this offseason will make the transition easier for Waite.
“We’ve got a number of people who had a good amount of court time last year,” Waite said. “Now it’s just stepping up and filling in the new roles. We’re seeing a lot of improvements in our first two months. They are doing really well. They are playing well as a group and as individuals.”
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