Siloam Springs Herald Leader

JBU volleyball players, coach earn awards and honors

- From Staff Reports

After leading the John Brown University volleyball team to its best season in more than a decade, sophomore Jessica Meyer was named to the first team while senior Alyssa Arnold was awarded an honorable mention in the 2017 American Volleyball Coaches’ Associatio­n-NAIA All-Region teams, the AVCA announced on Monday, Nov. 27.

Joining the tandem was Courtney Marshall, who was named the South-Central Region Assistant Coach of the Year.

Winning the league’s hitting efficiency title by over .025, sophomore Meyer adds to her trophy case after also collecting her first-career Sooner Athletic Hitter of the Year honors alongside a first-team nomination. She finished the season hitting .349 (325-102-639) overall and .378 in conference play. Meyer posted a season-best 16 kills against Wayland Baptist (Texas) on Nov. 7 and hit double-digit kills in 10 of JBU’s 16 conference games. In conference, Meyer also led the team with 46 blocks, averaging .87 rejections per set.

Arnold, meanwhile, collects her second-career All-Region honorable mention after finishing her collegiate career with a career-best season. She passed out 619 assists in conference play, averaging 11.7 helpers per set, the highest in the conference, en route to a SAC firstteam selection. Named the NAIA’s National Setter of the Week once this season, Arnold passed 50 assists or more five times this season, 13 times surpassing the 40-assist mark, totalling 1,161 helpers.

“Similar to when she earned this honor as a sophomore, Alyssa earned this prestigiou­s recognitio­n by stepping up and helping our team out when we lost our other setter for the season due to injury,” Carver said. “In making the transition to a 5-1 system, Alyssa had some memorable highlights this season including going over the 1,100-assist mark this season, being named the conference setter of the week five times and NAIA National Setter of the Week once. With her directing our team’s offense, Alyssa helped this year’s team finish with its highest attack efficiency (.219) in over a decade, tie the best kills per set performanc­e (13.2) and have the third-highest assists per set performanc­e. Alyssa did an exceptiona­l job this past season in working with our attackers and was always soliciting their feedback in how to give them better opportunit­ies to score via her set location and tempo.”

Marshall finished her threeyear stint as Carver’s graduate assistant this year, helping John Brown compile a 69-34 (.670) record over the last three seasons.

“Our final award winner, though not a player, was also an indispensa­ble piece of our team’s success this year and over the course of the past two years,” Carver said. “Both as a player during her senior year and my first year as JBU’s head coach and her time over the past three seasons as my assistant, Courtney has been a major influence on our team’s success. As a player, she and the rest of the senior class, provided me with a great group of leaders who were open and very supportive of what I brought into the program as a new head coach. During my time with her, several of the things that have impressed me most about her and really appreciate about her is her willingnes­s to learn, to lead and to serve. As a senior player, she had to adjust to a new coach, new systems, new values and in her specific case, playing a new role on the team as she came back from injury.

“A year later, she returned to the program and jumped into a whole new world for her by joining my coaching staff. Making the transition from being a player to a coach is a lot harder than it looks and what most players can grasp when they’re still playing. It takes a special person to be able to make that transition successful­ly and be able to find his/her coaching voice and be able to be an effective teacher. Courtney has been right there in ‘the trenches’ alongside of me and has helped in all aspects of our program from recruiting, to our strength and conditioni­ng, to our on-court training as well as being a great counselor and mentor to our players. She has continued to mature as a coach.”

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