Los Angeles Times

Growing desire for day at the beach may have ripple effects

- By Luca Evans

It’s soft, soothing sand versus stiff, unforgivin­g hardwood. It’s warm sunlight versus harsh LED lights. It’s the tide’s salty air versus the stink of sweat in dingy gyms.

For Cypress High’s Zoey Henson, the girls’ indoor Empire League most valuable player last season, life in club volleyball was a constant cycle of rehab. Her shoulder never felt right. Her back was in constant pain. She almost tore her meniscus in a tournament. So despite playing beach volleyball for only three years, with indoor Division I offers ahead, she dropped club and switched to the sand.

It’s easier on the joints. You can finish a hard-fought match and splash into the ocean afterward. What’s not to love?

“I can tell that the ratio of girls who are choosing beach over indoor is going to definitely be a lot higher,” Henson said.

Introducin­g the newest trend in Southern California sports — a wave of beach interest that could have major effects on the future of college volleyball. Across the beach tournament circuit this summer, players such as Newport Harbor’s Quinn Perry, Santa Ana Mater Dei’s Grace Hong and L.A. Marymount’s Julia Capps all made the choice to step away from strong indoor programs to focus on beach.

The interest is reflected in a boom of NCAA beach volleyball participat­ion. As interest in the sport increases and more schools introduce programs, the number of college women’s beach players has grown from 868 in 2016 to 1,485 last year.

“It’s just exciting to a lot of indoor girls that have been playing indoor their entire life … it’s this new, shiny toy,” Perry said.

Huntington Beach High indoor coach Craig Pazanti, who also coaches for Pinnacle Athletic Club, is seeing an effect on club volleyball — fewer girls in the upper divisions as players commit to beach programs before their senior seasons.

Two of those girls are Huntington Beach’s Haylee LaFontaine and Danielle Sparks, who won a 16U national championsh­ip as partners at an AAU tournament this summer. Both are indoor stars: LaFontaine is a dynamic outside hitter with a “robotic arm,” as Pazanti put it, and Sparks is the setter who greases the wheels in the Oilers’ offense. Yet both chose to play for Cal Poly’s beach volleyball program last month.

Three reasons for this wave of interest:

1. More versatilit­y: On the beach, players aren’t stuck in one position — they need to be able to hit, pass, block, serve or dig.

2. More agency: In indoor, as Anaheim Esperanza’s Clara Stillwell pointed out, players get subbed out by a coach if they make a mistake. In beach, there are no rotations.

3. Less injury risk: Running on the beach might be more exerting physically, but it’s also much less painful diving on sand than smacking a hardwood court.

It all adds up to a growing movement.

“It’s contagious,” Henson said. “Everybody’s starting to come over here.”

Dave Mohs tournament

It was perhaps impossible for any Southern Section challenger to take on San Diego’s Cathedral High, which has gone undefeated this season and won the annual Dave Mohs tournament at Huntington Beach Edison over Marymount on Saturday.

The highlight of the afternoon was the Sailors’ backand-forth semifinal with Huntington Beach, when the Oilers rallied from a 19-10 deficit in the second set to stun Marymount before falling 16-14 in the third. Marymount coach Cari Klein might have a new program stalwart on her hands in 5foot-10 freshman Samantha Destler, who put away Huntington Beach in the first set with three late kills and a big block.

San Clemente, meanwhile, staked its claim to a top-10 Southern Section ranking, knocking off Palos Verdes in the first round and then Mater Dei in the quarterfin­al.

Lower-division standouts

Mission Hills Bishop Alemany has emerged as a serious threat in the Mission League, beating Studio City Harvard-Westlake in three sets Tuesday. The Warriors are 8-0. Chino Hills, meanwhile, has steamrolle­d its way to 13-0.

Saugus lost its first match against Orange Lutheran on Saturday, but it’s currently the class of Division IV, holding a 20-1 record.

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