Los Angeles Times

Event turns into an extravagan­za

- ben.bolch@latimes.com Twitter: @latbbolch

will all compete with new partners.

Hard feelings? They’ve scattered like sand through the toes.

“We’ve turned the corner,” Walsh Jennings said of herself and Ross. “The bitterswee­tness is gone and now it’s fullbore excitement for the future. It’s just part of the sport. If you know beach volleyball, you know people break up.”

They also tend to come back together. Walsh Jennings and her new partner, Nicole Branagh, competed as a pair as far back as 2008, the start of an intermitte­nt partnershi­p that lasted until Misty May-Treanor decided to put off retirement to reconnect with Walsh Jennings and win a third consecutiv­e gold medal in the 2012 Olympics.

Walsh Jennings and Branagh resumed their affiliatio­n this spring after the former initially courted USC star Sara Hughes, who was noncommitt­al about leaving Trojans teammate Kelly Claes. Walsh Jennings’ coach, Marcio Sicoli, then invited Branagh to practice with her old partner, who liked what she saw in the fellow 38-yearold.

“It was like, ‘Holy hell, where have you been?’ ” Walsh Jennings said.

Walsh Jennings and Branagh will be making their 2017 domestic debut together after having lost their first three matches before reaching the round of 16 last week at an FIVB event in Gstaad, Switzerlan­d. They will face a field that includes reigning Olympic gold medalists Laura Ludwig and Kira Walkenhors­t of Germany; Brazilians Larissa Franca and Talita Antunes, who were runners-up in Gstaad; and Ross and Fendrick, who won the New York City Open together last month on the AVP tour.

The top men’s tandems include Phil Dalhausser and Nick Lucena, runners-up in the World Series of Beach Volleyball last year, as well as Olympic bronze medalists Alexander Brouwer and Robert Meeuwsen of the Netherland­s.

Ross and Walsh Jennings could face each other as part of a 16-team President’s Cup format that starts with pool play before the top four American and top four internatio­nal teams are slotted into a championsh­ip bracket on opposite sides. ESPN will live-stream all of the matches, with some broadcast live on the network and others on tape delay.

The new format is part of World Series of Beach Volleyball chief executive Leonard Armato’s efforts to increase interest in the FIVB-sanctioned event by making it one massive extravagan­za that also features a National Volleyball League tournament, the AAU junior national championsh­ips and a coed tournament open to the public.

Armato said he envisioned a festival-like atmosphere, with Grammy-nominated electronic dance music star Kaskade hosting a sold-out beach party Saturday.

“We want to make beach volleyball accessible to the masses as opposed to being a niche sport,” said Armato, who is also Walsh Jennings’ manager.

The split between Walsh Jennings and Ross drew more attention than most breakups because of their success together. They won a bronze medal at the Rio de Janeiro Olympics and ruled the domestic tour for years. Their last match as a duo came in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in February, when they finished fifth.

The end of their partnershi­p was precipitat­ed in part by Walsh Jennings’ displeasur­e with the AVP, which she felt was forcing players to sign overly restrictiv­e contracts that required a nondisclos­ure agreement just to view them. Walsh Jennings refused to comply, ending her associatio­n with the AVP, while Ross maintained her allegiance to the tour, saying she was satisfied with some contract concession­s made by tour officials.

Walsh Jennings said she and Ross differed in their view of how the sport should grow; Walsh Jennings felt the AVP didn’t provide a living wage for players and was an unsustaina­ble model for the future of beach volleyball.

“The bottom line is that I love and respect April,” Walsh Jennings said, “but it’s time to move on.”

Ross and others from the AVP tour received special dispensati­on to play in Long Beach. Ross said in May that she wouldn’t rule out playing with Walsh Jennings again but understood the difference­s that drove them apart.

“She thinks really big and she wants the sport to be really huge and I know that’s what she’s working for, so I totally respect her decision and what she’s trying to do,” Ross said at the time. “It’s just, for me, there was no question that I wanted to be out here playing for the AVP.”

They may have found some common aspiration­s this week.

“I don’t just want to beat her,” Walsh Jennings said of Ross, “I want to beat all the Americans and all of the world.”

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