Tri-County Vanguard

Volleyball club in Digby grows by leaps and bounds

Club has grown from 16 girls to 60 in recent years

- LAURA REDMAN DIGBYCOURI­ER.CA LAURA REDMAN LAURA REDMAN LAURA REDMAN LAURA REDMAN

The Digby Area Volleyball Club was started in 2012 with just 16 girls and has now grown to 60.

For club founder and president Sharyn Hiscock, volleyball was a family affair.

Growing up in Newfoundla­nd, her dad was her volleyball coach and her three sisters all played as well. When she started the club in Digby, she was the only volleyball coach in the area. But thanks to her efforts, there are now six certified coaches.

“Volleyball is one of the biggest female sports in Atlantic Canada,” Hiscock says. “The provincial­s are held over two weekends and there are hundreds of teams competing.”

Hiscock started out just helping coach some of the high school teams, but soon decided there was enough interest to form the club. Now they have girls coming from Clare and Annapolis to play.

“It’s really grown,” Hiscock says. “I’m so happy. We have won at least one provincial medal per year since we started. That’s in tier 2 or 3 – we’ve never played tier 1.” “All in,” with club founder and president Sharyn Hiscock.

Hiscock says the club starts girls in Grade 5 and last year had their first athlete play for Team Nova Scotia. Girls who want to play pay between $250 and $300, depending on their age, and the club fundraises the rest of the expenses. Hiscock says that sounds like a lot, but she works hard at fundraisin­g to ensure parents don’t have to spend another cent.

This year, the club has six teams – two U13, one U14, one U15 and two U16.

“Volleyball gives them something to be passionate about and kind of focuses their time away from alternativ­e or negative things,” Hiscock says. “But it also gives them a sense of teamwork – as soon as they walk in that gym – they have to get along so we push for that,” Hiscock says. “They have to work as a group.”

Hiscock says the girls come back all the time to tell her how grateful they are to her and to the club.

“They were so happy they got the opportunit­y to play,” she says.

And with the club expanding, she’s dreaming big.

“While the club has a recreation­al focus, we’ll train the athletes that we feel can be pushed a lot harder,” Hiscock says. “My goal is to someday be a tier 1 program – possibly in three years. We have some very talented young athletes coming through, girls who would play six days a week if I let them.

“Yeah, we’re pretty proud of it.”

 ?? LAURA REDMAN ?? The volleyball club in Digby has experience­d a lot of growth in recent years.
LAURA REDMAN The volleyball club in Digby has experience­d a lot of growth in recent years.
 ??  ?? Working on their game during a practice.
Working on their game during a practice.
 ??  ?? Going high at the net.
Going high at the net.
 ??  ?? Bumping the ball during a practice.
Bumping the ball during a practice.
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