Daily Breeze (Torrance)

No. 2 Long Beach State defeats No. 1 Hawaii in a five-set thriller

- By Tracy McDannald Correspond­ent

LONG BEACH >> A matchup between the top two men's college volleyball teams in the country lived up to the billing Saturday night.

With a crowd of 4,062 fans hanging on every point past the midway point of the fourth set, No. 2-ranked Long Beach State outlasted No. 1 Hawaii in a five-set thriller, winning 25-20, 20-25, 25-23, 24-26, 15-13 to sweep the twomatch Big West Conference series at the Walter Pyramid.

The American Volleyball Coaches Associatio­n national collegiate poll will be updated today.

“We were preparing for that kind of match, and I'm really proud of the effort to come back and play as well as we did, at time,” LBSU coach Alan Knipe said. “When faced with some things we didn't like about a set or two, or maybe lose a close set, to come back and have really nice composure throughout the match.”

LBSU (18-1, 4-0), which entered the series as the nation's top blocking team, asserted its dominance with a 20 1/2-to-8 1/2 advantage at the net — nearly double the output of the previous night's meeting.

LBSU senior middle blocker Simon Torwie led the way with 10 blocks, including a match-high three solo, and junior middle blocker DiAeris McRaven added a career-high eight to help the team win its eighth consecutiv­e match.

In the head-to-head series, LBSU has won the last 11 meetings in Long Beach dating back to 2007.

Tied 10-10 in the fifth, Torwie turned the momentum with a kill, two solo blocks and a tandem block with setter Aidan Knipe and outside hitter Sotiris Siapanis as part of a 4-1 run to force match point.

Torwie said he thrives on the pressure of a five-set match.

“There's a lot of emotions, it's a packed Pyramid,” Torwie said. “I prefer that over an easy 3-0 win. … I prefer having to fight for it and having to show that we really have it and learning from it.

“Hawaii showed up with a lot of fans, too. You could almost think the Pyramid was split between the teams, and that's just an amazing environmen­t to play in.”

The Rainbow Warriors (17-3, 0-2) got a kill from freshman outside/opposite hitter Louis Sakanoko and an LBSU attack error to prolong the match but Siapanis sealed the victory by finishing off a long rally with a swing down the middle of the court.

Siapanis finished with a team-high 17 kills and matched Knipe with a team-high 11 digs.

LBSU's defense limited Hawaii to .290 hitting or below in all five sets, finishing at a .248 clip. The Rainbow Warriors entered the two-match series as the nation's top attacking team with a .397 average.

“They had that Big West feel to it, meaning one night doesn't feel much like the next night,” coach Knipe said. “This is what happens when these two teams play.”

It was Hawaii's first series of matches since losing top outside hitter and twotime All-American Spyros Chakas to a season-ending knee injury. His replacemen­t in the starting lineup, junior outside hitter Keoni Thiim, collected a match-high 20 kills and Sakanoko added 19 in the loss.

Rainbow Warriors setter Tread Rosenthal, a Manhattan Beach native, finished an assist shy of matching his career high with 57.

Facing match point in the fourth, the Rainbow Warriors reeled off three consecutiv­e points including a wide LBSU attack to claim the set 26-24 and force the decisive frame.

The decision snapped a string of five consecutiv­e sweeps by either side in the head-to-head series. LBSU won the previous night's series opener 2522, 25-20, 30-28, with the final set setting the tone for Saturday's back-andforth marathon.

Hawaii entered the series on a 16-match winning streak, the longest in the nation.

 ?? PHOTO BY HOWARD FRESHMAN ?? Long Beach State players react after defeating Hawaii 3-2 on Saturday at Walter Pyramid. No. 2LBSU swept the weekend series with No. 1Hawaii.
PHOTO BY HOWARD FRESHMAN Long Beach State players react after defeating Hawaii 3-2 on Saturday at Walter Pyramid. No. 2LBSU swept the weekend series with No. 1Hawaii.

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