CARDINAL COUPLE

CARDINAL COUPLE
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Showing posts with label Kamden Schrand. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kamden Schrand. Show all posts

Saturday, August 16, 2025

Volleyball Hosts Red/Black Scrimmage -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Red Defeats Black 3-2



Though I'm not sure a final score truly matters, the Red Squad of the Louisville Cardinals volleyball team defeated the Black Squad in last night's intra-team scrimmage. The annual Red and Black Scrimmage represented the first time for most of CardNation to get their eyes on the 2025 edition of the Cards, their first season under Dan Meske. In addition to the end of the Dani Busboom Kelly era, the Anna DeBeer/Elena Scott reign came to an end at the close of last season as well, so there will be some new names for Louisville fans to become acquainted with. 

One of the players that rotated between the teams was a player that many fans are already well familiar with in Cara Cresse. According to reports from Jared on the floor, Cresse looks like she is already in All-American form, living up to much of the hype that has been thrown her way in the preseason. She had 11 kills and three blocks last night. Cresse will shore up a middle-blocking position that looks to anchor a blocking effort that could, if you believe it, be better than last season. Kalyssa Blackshear will play the second MB position, and she led the black team with 13 kills last night. 

Chloe Chicoine is the other player drawing a lot of attention in preseason, and she also came to play last night. Per Jared, she looked "phenomenal" playing the full rotation, and she amassed nine kills and 15 digs for the red team. Alanna Bankston led the red team with 14 kills and nine digs. Also hitting well for the black team was Payton Petersen, who finished with nine kills and led all players with 19 digs. 

Despite all of that, Jared mentioned that the hitting may be an aspect of Louisville's game that still needs some work. A lot of shots were coming out low, leading to unforced errors in the net and prime blocking material. Perhaps the best indication of that is setter Nayelis Cabello coming up with five blocks. 

Cabello set for the victorious red team last night, and she is part of one of the two major position battles on the floor. Her primary competition for the setter position is transfer Molly Wilson, who led the black team. In addition to the blocks, Cabello finished with two kills, 10 digs, and 38 assists. Wilson had 33 assists and 16 digs. For his part, Jared noted that he believes the edge goes to Cabello due to her ability to chase down errant passes. With two strong options, though, don't be surprised to see a 6-2 employed by Dan Meske. It's not as if he's unfamiliar with it. 

The other position battle is for the newly vacant libero position. While two liberos can be dressed, and Meske may very well choose to do so, it sounds like Kamden Schrand is not particularly interested in sharing the position. The junior had 17 digs last night and Jared notes that her competition (junior Molly Urban and freshman Hannah Kenny) were pretty far back. Kenny is listed as a setter on the roster, so she's an interesting conversion candidate if the defensive skills continue to be a focus. 

All in all, it should be an exciting season regardless, especially as the new players continue to gel with the returners. The next chance to see the Cards in action will be the alumnae match next Saturday. We don't have any confirmed players just yet (rumored are Scott, Claire Chaussee, and Charitie Luper, at least), but we do know some players who won't be playing. DeBeer is continuing to bring her ankle all the way to full for the next professional season, so she's rehabbing in a more controlled environment. Anna Stevenson Hall and Tori Dilfer Stringer are both expecting to be unavailable. Amaya Tillman is an assistant coach at UK, so that would be a competitive advantage issue, and Alexa Hendricks is traveling. Similar to Tillman, Aiko Jones may be precluded from playing due to her role as the Bellarmine head coach, but we'll see on that one. 


Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


We'll have four on board today, which is good since there is plenty to discuss. We'll talk actual game action, past and future, and any other news and notes from the week that was. Check out the show after it posts around 1PM, and be sure to subscribe so that it comes to your feed automatically. 


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Until next time, Go Cards!
Case

Saturday, April 19, 2025

Softball Falls; Volleyball Beats UK -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Cards Can't Repeat Upset at UVA


After the big win on Thursday evening, Louisville looked to sneak the series from Virginia last night, but they'll have to wait until today if they want to finish the job. The Cavaliers scored first and poured it on late to break away and ultimately take an 8-2 victory. Louisville will get another chance at noon today. 

Louisville ran a bit of a different lineup yesterday, with Easton Lotus leading off but Char Lorenz following her instead of Chelsea Mack. Lotus bunted out before Lorenz had an infield single. Madison Pickens was next, and the box score gives her a single with Lorenz out at second, so I'm not quite sure what happened there. Sounds like a fielder's choice to me, but so it goes. Pickens stole second but Bri Despines ended the inning with another infield ground ball. Hey... at least the Cards were putting the bat on the ball. 

Brooke Gray got the start and UVA jumped on her quickly. A double down the left field line opened the inning and a sac bunt turned into a single to put runners on the corners with nobody out. A steal put two in scoring position and a ground ball back to Gray allowed both runners to advance, scoring a run. The trail runner taking the base was what haunted, as the next ball was a sacrifice fly to center. A ground out ended the inning but the Cavs led 2-0. 

Louisville got those runs back in the third. Chelsea Mack, batting ninth, singled up the middle and advanced to second on a Lotus sacrifice bunt. Lorenz got her second infield single and Mack moved up to third. Lorenz then ran herself off the base paths with a caught stealing, which is an interesting choice in the situation. Either way, Pickens singled to score Mack and Despines singled to keep the two-out rally alive. Camryn Lookadoo then hit a sharp grounder to short, but the shortstop missed the throw to second, allowing Despines and Lookadoo to reach safely and allowing Pickens to score, unearned. The defense recovered, with the shortstop herself refielding the ball and throwing Despines out at third. Inning over, but the score was tied again. 

The tie remained to the bottom of the fourth when UVA again grabbed a leadoff double. Instead of a sac bunt turning into a single this time, it turned into an error when the ball wasn't caught cleanly at first. The unearned run was returned, and UVA regained the lead. A fielder's choice erased the lead runner (and the second potential unearned run), but a two-run homer made it 5-2. Gray recovered for a line out to make it two outs, but a single and a walk ended her day. Zabala came on in relief needing to just get one out, but a single to center was booted and two more unearned runs came in to score. A flyout ended the inning, but the lead had grown to 7-2. 

The Cards stranded six runners on base over the final three innings and were unable to cut into the lead. UVA added an insurance run they didn't need to set the final score at 8-2 in the bottom of the sixth. With two on and nobody out in the seventh, Louisville's chances ended on a strikeout, an infield fly, and a flyball to straightaway center. Ballgame. 

With Zabala having only thrown 1.1 innings yesterday and Sam Booe having come in to throw one of her own, it's anyone's guess who will take the start in the rubber match this afternoon. Louisville will need another strong offensive showing if they want to get a series upset. The game will air on ACC Network Extra. 

Meske Wins First Battle of the Bluegrass


Does a spring exhibition count as a true rivalry game? You bet it does. At least when we win. If we lose it doesn't count. Makes sense, right? Either way, the Cards took on the Cats in L&N Federal Credit Union Arena last night in their fourth and final spring match in the first season of the Dan Meske Era. Over 1,000 fans were on hand to watch the Cards take the 3-1 victory. We're still selling out the L&N FCU Arena in spring ball. I think the volleyball support is doing just fine. 

The Cards won 25-17, 20-25, 25-16, and 25-14 and were led by Payton Petersen and Reese Robins who each had eight kills. Defensively, the Cards were on fire. Kamden Schrand, officially wearing the libero jersey full time, finished with 22 digs, and Nayelis Cabello was close behind with 18. Cabello also contributed three blocks and six kills to go with her 24 assists. Petersen added four blocks and Robins had two. Those four will certainly be names we'll get used to hearing throughout the season. 

Other players that earned shoutouts from the official gocards writeup were Cara Cresse, Chloe Chicoine, Hannah Sherman, Kalyssa Blackshear, Ava Utterback, Hannah Kenny, and Alanna Bankston. There will be a lot of new names to get acquainted with after a fair amount of turnover from last season, but things appear to be just fine after Louisville went 4-0 during their spring season. Last night, the Cards also honored Elle Glock with a special senior day ceremony of her own after Glock decided to forego her final season of eligibility to graduate and depart UofL in May. 

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


We'll have three on hand today, as house projects keep Daryl away. Given the updates from last time she was on the show, we'll definitely let that slide. Join us as we talk softball, lacrosse, volleyball, and a little WBB. Check out the show after it posts around 1PM, and be sure to subscribe so that it comes to your feed automatically. 


Cardinal Couple YouTube: Link
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Until next time, Go Cards!

Case 

Saturday, November 9, 2024

Volleyball Sweeps; Basketball Wins Home Opener -- SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

Volleyball Wins in 3 at Syracuse


Louisville Volleyball went on the road to take on the once-mighty (and now not so much) Syracuse and are leaving New York with a sweep of the Orange. The Cards moved to 12-1 in the ACC and 20-3 overall with a fairly straightforward 25-17, 25-18, 25-15 win. 

Louisville won the first three points of the match and fairly well set the tone for the remainder. The Cards held the Orange at bay for a bit before back-to-back Syracuse aces made it 10-8. A service error and a Louisville ace quickly flipped it back to a four-point advantage for the Cards and the Orange never shrank the deficit from there. 

In both the second and third sets, Syracuse won the first couple of points. In the second, they were able to stick close until both teams reached double-digits. In the third, Louisville blitzed them quickly and put the match out of reach. The Cards dropped Syracuse (who was undefeated in non-conference play) to 1-12 in ACC and just 13-12 overall. Yikes. 

Louisville's offense was well distributed yesterday, with six players picking up at least five kills. Only one other player (Alanna Bankston) had a kill and she was one-for-one on attempts. Nearly everyone that attempted had a kill as well, but Nayelis Cabello was oh-for-one and Hannah Sherman was a surprising oh-for-three. Anna DeBeer led the way with 13 kills and a hitting percentage of .385. Carra Cresse and Reese Robins had identical offensive lines (6 kills, 1 error, 10 attempts, .500), but Cresse took the matchup with four block assists to Robins's one. PK was back in a big way with seven kills and a .556 hitting percentage. 

Last night saw the first opportunity for Louisville fans to see Kamden Schrand wear the off-color jersey with the starters. Elena Scott got the night off, and Schrand played well in the libero position. She finished with 12 digs and an ace, while recording no service or reception errors. She didn't have any assists, but with Cabello and Elle Glock putting up 38 of Louisville's 40 assists on 44 kills, there weren't many opportunities. 

It wasn't a huge blocking night for Louisville, overall, as they only finished with seven. But that was better than Syracuse's three, and they outhit the Orange .389 to .119. Louisville also won the service battle with each team recording six errors and Louisville putting up seven aces against Syracuse's five. 

It isn't a win to write home about, as I noted earlier, with the Orange occupying the third to last-spot in the conference, but when so many matches are emotionally draining top matchups, winning the ones you are supposed to easily is very important. Louisville will now head to Boston College to take on a scrappy Golden Eagles team. BC is only 12-13 (5-8) on the year, but as Jeff has mentioned, they can jump up and take a set off of anyone. Louisville shouldn't have too much trouble, but they can't take a road match like this for granted. Tomorrow's match gets underway at 1PM on ACC Network Extra. 

WBB Beats Southern Indiana 75-51


After opening the season with a tough loss to a highly ranked opponent in Paris, Louisville women's basketball started their home season with a get-back win over Southern Indiana. It may not have started quite like fans expected, but the Cards took care of the Screamin' Eagles in the end with a 24-point victory. Coach Walz was less than thrilled in his post-game press conference, citing a poor shootaround and mindset entering the game. The team responded after a close first quarter to play much improved for (almost) the rest of the game. 

Louisville picked up a quick 7-2 lead to open the game, but USI was not deterred. The Eagles hit a three to cut the deficit to two and held tight to the Cards despite two early 3-pointers from Merissah Russell. Ahead by a pair with three minutes to go in the first, Louisville gave up a pair of offensive rebounds that ultimately led to USI tying the score at 15. After a steal, the Eagles took the lead on a breakaway layup. Walz gave his team the chance to sort it out themselves, opting not to call a timeout. The Cards responded with an offensive rebounding effort of their own and tied it at 17 with 1:34 remaining. 

USI was ready to strike, though, and after retaking the lead, they extended their advantage to four with another steal and breakaway. Again, Walz chose not to call a timeout, and Russell hit her third triple of the first quarter. Russell then forced a steal on the other end and hit Izela Arenas on the outlet pass to give the Cards a 22-21 lead at the first break. 

Daryl displays the mood for the second quarter.
Paulie displays the mood for the remainder.
The first quarter was ugly. Louisville gave up five offensive rebounds, leading to eight second chance points, and they were outrebounded 9-7 overall. They allowed 7-16 shooting and USI was 5-6 at the free throw line. As Walz noted in his presser, the poor shootaround carried into the game, despite the team's "spirited discussion" after the walk-thru. 

After what I'm sure was another one of those spirited discussions in the quarter break, Louisville woke up. The Cards opened the second quarter on an 18-0 run (which extends to 23-0 if you take it back to the end of the first) over the first six minutes. Louisville went a bit cold for the remainder of the quarter, making just one more three over those final four minutes, but they held USI to just four points of their own, giving the Cards a 21-4 quarter victory and a 43-25 halftime lead. Louisville won the points-off-turnovers battle 12-0 in the second and held USI to 2-11 shooting. 

Southern Indiana recovered a bit in the third, scoring 11, but Louisville continued to apply the pressure with a 19-11 victory. It wasn't quite the same beatdown as the second, but the Cards held USI at more than arm's length, and entered the fourth with a comfortable margin. As the fourth quarter wore on, Louisville extended their lead to 33 points with 4:36 remaining in the game. Here is where Walz got frustrated again and why I said Louisville was much improved for almost the remainder of the game. Louisville had 13 turnovers in the game with three minutes to go. Louisville finished the game with 19 turnovers. Woof. They also lost those last three minutes 9-2. Double woof. Despite having a largely rotated lineup in the game at that point, Walz and the fans would expect more from the team. 

At the end of the day, Louisville comes out on top with a 24-point win. It's easy to nitpick, but it's also easy to forget that this is a very young team that has a lot of growing up and growing together to do. The close loss against UCLA may have given us a bit of an overestimation of how the beginning of this season could look. Similarly, this game could be the outlier and Louisville could go on the road and beat the tar out of UT Martin. We'll see. 

The FRED Report


F-Free Throws: Louisville took a surprising number of foul shots in this game. If you're surprised at 18 shots, though, you'll be shocked at only 9 makes. No letter. 

R-Rebounds: Should Louisville outrebound an OVC team easily? Yes. Did they? Kind of. Louisville finished with a 45-31 advantage on the boards and won both the OR and DR stats. The first quarter wasn't great, but they did clean it up significantly. Only because they managed to also win the second chance points battle, I'll award a capital 'R'. 

E-Effort/Execution:
Hmmmm. This one is a toughie. The Cards shot 29-64, making 45.3% of their shots in the game. They were 8-25 from beyond the arc, which isn't terrible, but 32% isn't great either. Excluding the first nine minutes and the last three minutes, Louisville outscored USI by 36. But you can't exclude those minutes. And 36 would be an ok, but expected margin of victory for this whole game. I'm going to say no letter. 

D-Defense: The Cards held the Eagles to 37.5% from the floor, but that's largely thanks to the 2-11 second quarter. USI was over that percentage in the other three. The Cards had 12 steals and four blocks. With the very strong second quarter and the good quarter and a half after the break, I'll give lowercase 'd'. 

That yields a final score of _-R-_-d, which is not particularly good. It's early in the season, of course, but we'll want to see more out of this team in their next outing. 

Daryl grabs a selfie with
Z-Bo (Zach Randolph), 
father of Mackenly
Speaking of the team, nearly everyone played. All but Jayda Curry and Rebekah Graves saw the floor, with everyone getting at least five minutes. Louisville was led by Olivia Cochran, who finished with 15 points. The only other player in double figures was Taj Roberts, who had 11. Imari Berry led the team with eight rebounds, with Cochran and Ja'leah Williams close behind at six. Nyla Harris and Merissah Russell finished with nine points each. Everyone that played snagged at least one rebound and everyone except for Reagan Bender and Eseosa Imafidon scored. Bender was a bit of a surprise, going 0-5 from the field (all from three-point distance) in fifteen minutes. 

With Curry out, two freshmen joined Cochran and Harris in the starting lineup along with transfer Ja'leah Williams. Mackenly Randolph and Taj Roberts drew the starts, but it was another freshman, Izela Arenas, who picked up the second most minutes (23) behind Cochran's 25. 

Louisville is back in action on Tuesday against UT Martin. That game will be on ESPN+ and will tip at 7PM eastern. 

Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast


The number of topics is shrinking with a couple of fall sports wrapping up, and coincidentally, the hosts are shrinking with it (for this week). Paulie and Jeff (and maybe Daryl) will bring you the show this week with plenty of volleyball and basketball to discuss. You can check out the live stream of the show by going to the Cardinal Couple YouTube page and clicking on the live video. Jeff usually creates that about an hour before the show, which officially starts at 11 AM Eastern. If the live time doesn't work for you, there are plenty of playback options, so be sure to check out whichever is best for you!

Cardinal Couple YouTube: Link
Spotify: Link
Apple Podcasts: Link
Google Podcasts: Link
Overcast (free account required): Link
Pocket Casts (free account and app required): Link
RadioPublic: Link






Until next time, Go Cards!

Case