Los Angeles Times

Players, not fans, cheer AVP’s return

- By Jack Harris

On the eve of her sport’s return to action, beach volleyball player Alix Klineman went to bed Friday night with butterflie­s in her stomach. Her teammate, twotime Olympic medalist April Ross, felt the type of nervous adrenaline that usually doesn’t accompany a standard AVP tournament.

Of course, little was standard about this weekend’s Monster Hydro Cup, the first of three consecutiv­e tournament­s in the AVP’s Champions Cup Series, a three-weekend event in Long Beach replacing the tour’s original schedule amid the coronaviru­s crisis.

Only players and essential tour personnel were allowed near the man-made courts erected in the Long Beach Convention Center parking lots. Players were kept separated between matches and sheltered as much as possible between points. They were thankful to have the sport back, breaking up what some feared could be a near-yearlong layoff leading up to the 2021 Olympics, but all too aware of the conditions surroundin­g its return.

“After we won, there were no fans cheering,” said Ross, who with Klineman won the women’s bracket as the topseeded team. Instead, “all the staff [around the court] was cheering as loud as they could. That was nice.”

Before the event, the AVP tested all players and staff members. At the start of each day, players had to remain in their car and fill out a symptom questionna­ire on their phone. Once cleared, they had to wear orange bands around their wrist or ankle at all times, including on the court.

Yet, once the matches began, the level of competitio­n hardly suffered.

“Everyone looked ready,” said Nick Lucena, who won the men’s bracket with Phil Dalhausser. “Maybe not in peak form, but today it was a high level of play.”

Chief operating officer Al Lau said tour officials created guidelines for everything from catering to sanitation to even the spreadout furniture arrangemen­ts in the players’ tents.

Those were sacrifices players made to return to the court. When the pandemic arrived in March, beach volleyball was in the final stages of its Olympic qualifying process, which is organized by its internatio­nal governing body, FIVB.

Four months later, the path to Tokyo remains uncertain — FIVB is hoping to stage more internatio­nal World Tour events in coming months, but the unpredicta­bility of the pandemic means it is far from a guarantee — making the return of this weekend’s competitio­n a relief, even though AVP events don’t count toward Olympic points.

“It’s been nine months since our last tournament, which is a really long time,” said Klineman, who with Ross is second in the Olympic qualificat­ion standings and expected to reach Tokyo. “We wanted to take advantage of this time, treat the training really seriously, use this kind of like a mini training camp … to remember how to compete again. We don’t know the next time we’re going to have this chance.”

 ?? Mpu Dinani AVP ?? APRIL ROSS, left, and Alix Klineman took home the trophies after winning the women’s event.
Mpu Dinani AVP APRIL ROSS, left, and Alix Klineman took home the trophies after winning the women’s event.

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