Western and McMaster to play for men's volleyball gold
Waterloo 0 vs. Western 3
HAMILTON, Ont. – The Western Mustangs men's volleyball team swept the Waterloo Warriors in three straight sets on Friday evening at McMaster's Burridge Gym to advance to tomorrow's OUA Final Four Championship game and earn a spot in next week's CIS Men's Volleyball Championship in Calgary.
The win extends the Mustangs winning streak to 10 games and after defeating the Waterloo Warriors in one of two semi-final matchups at the Final Four event the CIS No. 8 Mustangs will now face either the McMaster Marauders or Ryerson Rams in the gold medal game.
After finishing the regular season in second place in the OUA with a 17-3 record and earning a first round playoff bye, the Mustangs faced the Warriors for the first game of the Final Four in a highly anticipated battle between two of the top teams in the OUA. The CIS No. 9 Warriors (16-4) advanced to the Final Four after defeating the Queen's Gaels 3-1 last week in their quarterfinal matchup.
Friday's semi-final contest marked the third meeting between the Mustangs and the Warriors this season and although the purple and white came out on top in the two previous contests, both games needed the full five sets to be decided. After the Mustangs squeaked by with a 15-13 fifth-set win in their last meeting with the Waterloo squad, another five set game was expected between the two evenly matched teams.
Three sets would be all the Mustangs needed this time around, however, as they started the match strong and held on all the way through a tight third set to record their strongest win of the season against the Waterloo squad.
Off to a commanding start, Western took an early 6-1 advantage and extended the lead to 16-8 midway through the first set. With tough serves, including six aces, the Mustangs were able to keep momentum away from the Waterloo squad and put them on the defensive, claiming a 25-15 first-set win for the purple and white.
The second set saw the Warriors and Mustangs trade points until a turning point in favour of the purple and white when a missed Waterloo serve was followed by two aces from Phil James to give the Western team a 9-4 lead. Midway through the set it would be James again behind a shift in momentum as he recorded a huge kill followed immediately by a stuff block to keep the five-point lead at 15-10. The Mustangs would only extend their lead from there, walking away with another 25-15 win. Justin Scapinello was a force to be reckoned with on the right side, hitting 54% on nine kills from 15 attempts in the frame.
After taking the first two sets, the Mustangs entered the third just 25 points away from a gold medal game berth but were unable to gain early momentum as the Warriors took an 11-8 lead, their biggest of the match and enough to earn Western's first timeout of the contest.
It would prove beneficial as the Mustangs put an end to the Waterloo run and battled back to a two-point deficit but were unable to reverse the lead as the teams continued to trade points to eventually put the Warriors up 18-16. Once again it was James to give life to the Mustangs as he earned two big points from double stuff blocks with Garret May to tie the game at 18. Derek Kuiack entered the set for Doug Austrom and added a kill to the Western comeback, but Zachary Doherty caused problems from the service line for the Mustangs at a critical time in the game to once again give the Warriors a two-point lead.
The Mustangs refused to lie down, however, and a quick set to the middle from Sean Mckay to James put the purple and white behind by one at 22-21. A kill from Scapinello gave the Mustangs the advantage at 23-22 and they wouldn't look back, with May serving the final point and Scapinello once again putting the ball to the ground with the attack as Western took the third set 25-22.
With a surprising 12 and eight service errors on the night for the Warriors and Mustangs, respectively, both teams struggled with consistency in the opening match of the Final Four Championships hosted by McMaster. James and May proved why they were named OUA First Team All-Stars with a team-high 15 points each on the day, while Scapinello added 12 of his own. Luke Sim rounded out the Western offence with ten points in the contest, while Second Team All-Star Mckay led the team defensively with six digs in three sets.
Source: Western Sports Info
Semifinal 2
Ryerson 0 @ McMaster 3
They started slowly on Friday, but the Marauders gradually built up steam as they rolled through a semifinal sweep of the Ryerson Rams.
Set scores were 25-22, 25-19 and 25-10 for the CIS no. 1-ranked Marauders, who sealed a place at next week's CIS Championship in Calgary with the win. With the Western Mustangs similarly sweeping the Waterloo Warriors earlier on Friday, the Marauders and Mustangs will rematch their OUA final of a year ago.
Second-year outside Stephen Maar led the Marauders – and the match – with 15.5 points in the win, converting 12 of 21 hitting attempts versus just three errors (42.9 per cent) and adding three total blocks. OUA Player of the Year Jori Mantha followed with 13.5 points, while Jayson McCarthy had 12.5 points and hit 9-15 with just two errors (46.7 per cent).
Coleman Lucas was Ryerson's high scorer in a losing effort, posting nine points on 7-11 hitting with one error (54.5 per cent) and two aces.
The visiting Rams got the best of the match's early exchanges, feeding off the energy of a raucous travelling crowd to take a 10-5 lead in the first set, and force a timeout from the host Marauders. But McMaster began to immediately chip away at the deficit after the break, and had retaken the initiative after the technical timeout.
Improved serving played a large part in the resurgence, as McMaster pushed ahead to 20-15 and put itself in sight of the first set finish line. Ryerson fought back to within striking distance, but McCarthy hammered a shot down the right line to bring up set point, and Mantha went cross court just two points later to seal the first for the home side.
Side-out volleyball reigned to open the second set, but McMaster managed to pull ahead ever so slightly at the technical timeout when McCarthy ended a prolonged rally with a cross-court kill for 16-13. The Marauders surged toward the 25-point mark with the help of a few costly Ryerson errors, such as the Rams' decision to leave an Austin Campion-Smith float serve to drop on the left side line for 20-14.
The gap was too wide for the Rams to claw back, and Mantha polished off consecutive points to win the second set for McMaster, coming up with an inspired shot through a double block to salvage a broken play for 25-19.
Down two sets, Ryerson seemed out of both ideas and energy, as McMaster quickly pounced to open the third. The Marauders were firing on all cylinders, and when Mantha savagely killed off an overpass, McMaster was doubling up Ryerson at 14-7. Two points later, Tyson Alexander produced a solo stuff block to bring the teams into the technical timeout.
The Rams weren't helping their own cause, with errors piling onto the Marauders' already sizable lead. A Ryerson attack flew well wide of the right line, and brought up a last-ditch timeout from the visitors at 20-10. Five points later, it was mercifully over, as McCarthy followed an Alexander ace with a wipe off a double block and down for 25-10.
McMaster and Western return to familiar circumstances on Saturday, competing for an OUA title at the Burridge Gym for a second consecutive year. The Marauders have won each of their past eight meetings with the Mustangs in all competitions, with their last loss to Western coming in January 2012. The OUA final is set for its first serve at 7:00 p.m.
Source: McMaster Sports Info