Los Angeles Times

Mira Costa teammates square off in inaugural beach volleyball final

- By Luca Evans

These were the championsh­ips, and yet the coach lounged. Leaning back in the sand. One knee crossed over the other. Fiddling with her phone to film her athletes like a proud parent and not a coach.

Nancy Reynolds, coach of the Manhattan Beach Mira Costa girls’ beach volleyball team, was recusing herself.

This was an important day; a ground-breaking day. It was the first pairs championsh­ip in CIF Southern Section history. As the Wednesday afternoon wind at the Newland Beach volleyball courts in Huntington Beach whipped through banners wedged in the sand, the outcome became inevitable before the finals started.

A smattering of attendees clapped from beach chairs. Traffic groaned from the nearby Pacific Coast Highway. Charlie Fuerbringe­r and Erin Inskeep of Mira Costa would face Tanon Rosenthal and Savanna Lau of ... Mira Costa.

“Let’s go, Costa!” a parent yelled, and no matter where they were sitting, it wouldn’t be wrong.

Mira Costa beach volleyball, as a team, hadn’t lost a match since 2012, stretching back to play in the Interschol­astic Beach Volleyball League. It won the first Southern Section team title for beach volleyball last weekend. So Reynolds, her work done, plopped down in the sand under the cover of a Mira Costa tent and enjoyed.

The athletes in front of her didn’t much need a coach, if you asked her. Fuerbringe­r, one of the best indoor prospects in the country and daughter of former pro Matt Fuerbringe­r, is headed to Wisconsin; Inskeep, a Cal Poly beach commit, won the AAU U18 national pairs title over the summer; Rosenthal will be playing next year at the University of Arizona.

Through two sets, in a championsh­ip match that

looked more like a hardfought scrimmage, they fought Mustang against Mustang. Fuerbringe­r, setter extraordin­aire in indoor play, flexed a cannon of an arm on spikes. Inskeep found every inch between borders of the sand court with her shots.

From a chair nearby, 6foot-8 AVP pro player Ed Ratledge marveled, his company VolleyOC the tournament’s sponsor.

“Wouldn’t change that,” he said to a Southern Section representa­tive, watching the pairs go back and forth. “Wouldn’t change that. Wouldn’t change that.”

“They are fluent in this game,” Ratledge said a couple of minutes later. “Absolutely, utterly fluent in this game.”

Fuerbringe­r and Inskeep won a narrow two sets, 21-19 on each, to take home the inaugural Southern Section pairs title. More hardware

for a school that has become synonymous with volleyball in Southern California.

“We’ve obviously had a program for a long time,” Reynolds said. “That’s why we’re so deep . ... Hopefully we can kind of lead the way and pave the way for all these other programs.”

The first year of Southern Section beach volleyball was an experiment in real time, as the volleyball committee had to seed Division 1 and 2 programs without previous history.

Many schools, at times, struggled to balance beach programs with athletes also playing during the indoor club season.

“It’s been tough, trying to draw some of those athletes to come and spend some time on the beach,” said Studio City Harvard-Westlake coach Mitch Kallick, who coached sisters and California beach commits Bella and Alex Adishian in a back-andforth

semifinal matchup against Inskeep and Fuerbringe­r.

As club teams have risen in prominence, some of the tradition and importance of local high school programs has been lost, Reynolds said. But, assistant commission­er Mike Middlebroo­k said, the Southern Section hopes in time the high school beach season will take priority.

“That’s what colleges know — they come looking at club, obviously beach volleyball,” Middlebroo­k said. “And now we want to step up and say this, it’s more than just club.”

Fuerbringe­r, a junior, and Inskeep, a senior, have been striving for a high school beach title since they began playing together at Mira Costa. On Wednesday they delivered.

“Kids still grow up wanting to do it — wanting to play for Costa,” Reynolds said, “wanting to win a ring.”

 ?? Luca Evans Los Angeles Times ?? MIRA COSTA’S beach volleyball tandem of Erin Inskeep, right, and Charlie Fuerbringe­r, second from right, with coach Kelly Reynolds, beat teammates Tanon Rosenthal, left, and Savanna Lau, second from left, in the pairs final.
Luca Evans Los Angeles Times MIRA COSTA’S beach volleyball tandem of Erin Inskeep, right, and Charlie Fuerbringe­r, second from right, with coach Kelly Reynolds, beat teammates Tanon Rosenthal, left, and Savanna Lau, second from left, in the pairs final.

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