Kuwait Times

Jennings will skip AVP tour

-

NEW YORK: Five-time Olympian Kerri Walsh Jennings is looking for a new partner - and a new beach volleyball tour - after rejecting an exclusivit­y agreement with the AVP that would have locked her into the circuit through the 2020 Summer Games in Tokyo. In her first public comments since breaking with the biggest, richest and longest-running domestic tour, Walsh Jennings told The Associated Press on Thursday that the deal lacked the vision to grow the game and was “a death sentence for our sport.” Among her complaints: an eight-stop circuit, with what she called minimal growth in prize money or the number of events, dooming athletes to live with their parents or take full-time jobs to support themselves.

“We’re being kept in a small little fishbowl,” Walsh Jennings told the AP. “I know our sport deserves more. We’ve been told we’re small, and we believe it.” AVP owner Donald Sun declined to respond to the comments. But when Walsh Jennings missed the deadline to sign before this week’s season-opening Huntington Beach (California) Open, he told the AP: “I respect her decisions, and I wish her well.” The decision to opt out of the AVP tour also means Walsh Jennings will split with April Ross, her partner in Rio de Janeiro when they won the Olympic bronze medal. Walsh Jennings won three straight gold medals with Misty May-Treanor, who retired after the London Games.

DIFFERENT VISION

Walsh Jennings and Ross could continue to pair up on the internatio­nal tour, where teams earn points to qualify for the 2020 Games, but that would mean maintainin­g separate partnershi­ps domestical­ly and abroad. Ross’ decision to sign the deal means she couldn’t play in the competing National Volleyball League, which lists four 2017 events on its website. “April and I are finished. We’re not competing together anymore,” Walsh Jennings said. “We had a very candid conversati­on. I know we’re both very comfortabl­e where we’re at. I just have a different vision for the future.”

With its party atmosphere dropped into picturesqu­e backdrops like London’s Horse Guards Parade and Rio’s Copacabana Beach, beach volleyball emerges every four years as the darling of the Olympics. (The bikinis don’t hurt with the TV audience, either.) But the sport’s efforts to establish a stable U.S. tour have left it running in the sand.

Beach volleyball athletes have quarreled with USA Volleyball, arguing that the national governing body’s efforts were skewed toward the indoor game. The AVP twice declared bankruptcy, and since emerging from the second reorganiza­tion it has found itself in competitio­n with the NVL, even though all agree that one, stable tour would be best for the sport. And, when the NCAA considered adding beach volleyball to its list of sanctioned programs, among the opponents were indoor volleyball coaches who were afraid of losing their top athletes to the sandier, sexier side of the sport.

Walsh Jennings, who has been at the forefront of many of these fights, said her goal remains to do what’s best for her sport. As its most visible and marketable athlete, at least in the United States, she is able to make a living by relying on endorsemen­t deals others don’t have. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait