The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

PJP II back on court, sweeps Upper Merion

- By Owen McCue omccue@pottsmerc.com @Owen_McCue on Twitter

Chelsea Harvey said there were plenty of tears — happy of course — when she found out the Pope John Paul II girls volleyball team would have a season this fall.

Then came a phone call to fellow senior Hanna Tulli and some more joyful waterworks.

Like several other local programs, the Golden Panthers’ girls volleyball squad didn’t think they’d have a season at one point this fall. Now, they’re enjoying every opportunit­y they get to take the court, particular­ly a senior group that includes four-year starters Harvey and Tulli.

The Golden Panthers, who have eight games scheduled, won their second straight match to open the 2020 season Monday, taking out typical Frontier Division rival Upper Merion 3-0 (25-14, 25-7, 25-14) in the Vikings’ opener.

Harvey had seven kills and 29 assists, Tulli and senior Heather Lesinski added 13 kills apiece and senior Jessie Donovan and sopho

more Grace Hooper tallied 12 and eight digs, respective­ly, in the victory.

“We were just so excited. It was the best feeling to find out (we were having a season),” Harvey said. “It’s what we’ve all been working for.”

PJP and Upper Merion both got a late start to the season as their school districts — or in the case of PJP the Archdioces­e of Philadelph­ia — decided to opt out of fall sports at the beginning of the school year.

The decisions were later reversed, but a delayed start kept both squads out of the official Pioneer Athletic Conference season and out of official competitio­n until last Wednesday against Phoenixvil­le for PJP and Monday night’s game for Upper Merion.

While Upper Merion currently only has three games listed on its schedule, the Golden Panthers will play eight games in a 12-day stretch as they try to qualify for the District 1-3A tour

nament beginning Nov. 2.

Unable to officially defend last season’s league championsh­ip, PJP will face the top two current teams in the PAC — Boyertown and Perkiomen Valley — on Thursday and Friday, respective­ly.

“We have a pretty competitiv­e schedule ahead of us, but we’ve been working so hard in the gym so I think we’re prepared and ready to take on the competitio­n,” Tulli said. “I’m so grateful. I know this season isn’t everything we expected and there’s a lot of limitation­s, but I’m just so happy we’re able to play and compete to the best of our ability.”

“We were disappoint­ed we couldn’t be in the PAC to defend last year’s championsh­ip, but hey that’s the way it goes, we’re still playing,” PJP coach Ryan Sell added.

While PJP returned Tulli and Harvey — both first team all-area players last year — and several others with significan­t varsity experience, Upper Merion has just one key returner in junior libero Vanessa Hutchinson.

Opening with the reigning PAC and District 1-3A champs was a difficult challenge for UM coach Tony Funsten’s inexperien­ced squad.

Hutchinson, who made several terrific digs, did her best to help keep the Vikings in the contest, including a stretch of serves that helped UM go up 11-4 in the third set before PJP reeled off 21 of the next 24 points to close out the match.

“We’re doing the best we can, and I think we’ll get a little bit better as we move along, but there’s no games, no scrimmages, nothing to hang your hat on, and we’re not deep,” Funsten said. “With someone like Pope John Paul, their practices are better than this match because their second team is almost as good as their first team.

“We can’t simulate that. We can’t simulate Pope John Paul and having no scrimmages makes it even more pronounced. We’ll just do the best we can and as in every sport, then we get better each and every time out, and I think we will. We’ve got a great group of kids and that’s why I coach.”

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