Boys volleyball: Tars seize command
- Share via
Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - Newport Harbor High boys volleyball coach Dan Glenn
was up well past his bedtime Thursday, tending to his infant child. But,
with the way his Sailors dispatched visiting Woodbridge in a showdown of
Sea View League unbeatens Friday night, he doesn’t figure to lose much
sleep worrying about whether the Tars, ranked No. 1 in Orange County, can
improve upon their second-place league finish of a year ago.
“This was a good win,” Glenn said following the 15-10, 15-12, 15-8
sweep of the No. 4-ranked Warriors. “It gives us some breathing room.”
The victory improved Newport Harbor to 16-5, 4-0 in league, as it
becomes the first of five Sea View schools to complete the first round
of league play.
Woodbridge (2-1 in league) now joins those looking up at Harbor in the
standings, biding its time until getting a rematch April 30 on the
Warriors’ floor.
“We want to be No. 1 coming out of the Sea View League, because there
are a lot of tough teams in our (CIF Southern Section Division II),”
Glenn said.
The Sailors outlasted more than dominated the Warriors, following
through on Glenn’s belief they could wear the taller, less-skilled
Warriors down.
“They’re a big team that sometimes has trouble with ball control,”
Glenn said. “I thought if we could extend some games, I liked our
chances.”
The Sailors were forced to take the long view in the first two games,
as Woodbridge claimed leads well into both.
Woodbridge, which starts five seniors, including USC-bound setter
Blake Searles and high-flying 6-foot-4 outside hitter Scott Sebek (a
match-high 24 kills), claimed a 9-7 first-game lead.
But, after Harbor rallied to tie it at 9, the Perrine brothers, senior
Greg and freshman Brett, combined for all seven Newport kills as the
hosts closed the game out.
Brett Perrine’s stuff block was the deciding point.
Woodbridge forged a 9-7 lead in Game 2, and, thanks to some sloppy
play by the Sailors, extended that cushion to 11-8.
But, Harbor’s veteran core of Greg Perrine, Brian Gaeta, Erik Peterson
and setter Loyd Wright, remained composed.
“They didn’t panic at all,” Glenn said. “I thought maybe they should
have been panicking a little. I was the one panicking.”
With Woodbridge up, 12-10, sophomore middle blocker Jaime Diefenbach
and Wright combined on a stuff block to cut the deficit to one. Then,
Wright’s float serve landed untouched for an ace and another combo block
by Brett Perrine and Peterson put the Sailors in control. Two hitting
errors, among several unforced miscues by the visitors, allowed the
Sailors to assume full command, then cruise to the third-game triumph.
“I thought we did a good job of cutting down on our unforced errors,”
Glenn said. “We didn’t shoot ourselves in the foot.”
While Harbor did miss 13 serves, the Warriors missed 21.
Greg Perrine paced the winners with 17 kills, while Peterson (10),
Diefenbach (10), Gaeta (nine) and Brett Perrine (nine) rounded out a
balanced hitting attack. Wright collected 44 saves.
Peterson added five stuff blocks and Brett Perrine had four, while
Greg Perrine had two jump-serve aces and an additional service winner.
Searles had 53 assists for Woodbridge.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.