CARDINAL COUPLE

CARDINAL COUPLE
We report on the joy and excitement of UofL women's sports here. Thanks for checking us out! Click the picture of Louie to hear the latest Cardinal Couple Radio Hour Podcast!!
Showing posts with label Brooke Mattingly. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brooke Mattingly. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Wednesday Cardinal Couple -- Volleyball releases 2014 schedule



WEDNESDAY CARDINAL COUPLE


- CARDS BEGIN FIRST ACC SEASON


For Anne Kordes and the University of Louisville Volleyball team, the 2014 season as a member of the ACC means revisiting some former foes, taking on some new challenges and going through a non-conference slate that will be demanding.

30 matches and nine nationally ranked opponents, 11 regionally ranked teams and nine teams in the top 60 RPI.

UofL gets underway in the ACC/B1G Challenge (yes, it's the old Big 10). The Cards and Notre Dame go against Wisconsin and Minnesota in Minneapolis on Aug. 29-30. They'll host the Active Ankle Challenge in Cardinal Arena on Sept 5-6 with Tennessee State, Appalachian State and Cincinnati coming to town.

The Kentucky Wildcats visit the KFC YUM! on Sept 9th. Louisville will play in the Comfort Inn and Suites Invitational
next at Morehead where the Eagles, Arizona State, Louisville and Northern Illinois will participate.

Rounding out the non-conference slate is a trip to Houston for the Rice Invitational....where Louisville will face the Owls, Stephen F. Austin and Texas Southern.

Conference play begins Sept. 26th. in the KFC YUM! Center. 18 conference games...nine at home...ending with a three game homestretch at the end of November.

The ACC does not have a conference volleyball tournament.

Tougher foes, according to our volleyball guru Worldwide Jeff, four starters graduated and seven matches in the KFC YUM! Center. Interestingly, the Cards will begin their home slate in Cardinal Arena in September and end it there in November. Scheduling conflicts, we assume...but when packed...Cardinal Arena can be a very loud and nerve-racking place for an opponent to visit. 

Louisville does return AAC Freshman of the Year Maya McClendon, outside hitter Janelle Jenkins and setter Katie George. A couple of transfers and a solid returning nucleus will give Louisville a chance at another great season...but don't expect the Cards to run the conference slate undefeated like they did last year.

A rebuilding year for Anne Kordes? Perhaps. Losing to graduation the phenomenal Caitlin Welch at libero, strong middle blockers Brooke (Stomp) Mattingly and Randi Ewing...plus steady, dependable Emily Juhl as an outside hitter leaves some gaps to fill. Hannah Kvitle was a go-to back up at setter/defensive specialist who transferred at the end of the season.

It's hard to classify it as a rebuilding year when you ran the table in the AAC the previous season...and each year coaches face the task of replacing graduating players...but Kordes has talent where it counts the most in two extremely talented "kill" artists in McClendon and Jenkins and they had between them six of the top ten kill totals per match in the 2013 season.

Opening serve is just nine weeks away...get out the net, knee pads and Anne's clipboard....Volleyball is back!

paulie



Sunday, February 2, 2014

Sunday Cardinal Couple -- South Florida arrives with warmer weather



SUNDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

               ***** GAME RESULT*****

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Louisville went on a 13-0 run to end the first half and (4) second half threes by Tia Gibbs helped the Cards maintain the lead to defeat USF 79-59 Sunday afternoon. We'll have much more in the Monday edition of CARDINAL COUPLE
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- Lacrosse pre-season banquet recap

- WBB faces Bulls today

-Volleyball post-season banquet review


Louisville Lacrosse held their pre-season Crease Club banquet Saturday Night in the PNC Plaza @ Papa John's Cardinal Stadium for an appreciative crowd of players, parents and fans of the program.

Seniors Hillary Bushway and Monica Negron were the Misresses of Ceremony for the dinner and greeted the capacity crowd along with assistant coaches Crysti Foote and Vicki Latino. The attendees got to see a Game Day video of the 2014 Lacrosse team and heard commentary from the coaches and seniors. After Amy Poteet's Invocation, a delicious meal was served while Coach Young gave her season preview of the squad.

Before Young spoke, she pulled a surprise on senior Nikki Boltja....showing the crowd her #9 jersey framed to hang in a place of honor in the lacrosse offices. Boltja seemed genuinely touched and very humbled by the honor.

Young had glowing comments for each of the thirty players on the squad and revealed "the word" for the season. Last year, it was "champions" and this year it is "finish".

Finish a drill, finish the day. Finish the job, finish the game.

Another video followed...one with highlights...and then the keynote address speaker Kelly Berger Rabil spoke to the crowd.

A former player under Young at James Madison University and member of the 2013 USA World Cup Championship team, Rabil recalled her beginnings in Lacrosse and the joys and heartaches that were part of her high school and college years. She recalled how Coach Young left before her senior year to take the job at Louisville and her sadness about Kellie leaving.

Rabil suffered from two ACL knee injuries, one in each knee...one year apart as she finished her college career. Many players would have abandoned the game at that point but Rabil persisted and eventually made the US National Team and the World Cup squad. Her dedication and drive are inspiring examples we all could follow in our life-situations.

After a touching poem tribute to their teammates, Bushway and Negron gave way to Foote and Latino...who ended the program.

Louisville Lacrosse. #ONAMISSION (twitter-wise). It's going to be a great year for Young's warriors.

paulie

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The Bulls of South Florida ride in to the YUM Center today in an effort to knock off the #5 team in the country, hoping to score a marquee win against a top team.  Meanwhile, the Cardinals are defending their home court, and protecting seeding in the post season. 

Just three weeks ago today, the Cardinals were in sunny Florida taking on the Bulls. 
The Cardinals won that affair, 62-54, but not before the Bulls gave the Cards all they could handle in a slow start. 

In Florida, Jude was not playing due to the ankle injury.  The Cardinals were led in scoring by Shoni Schimmel (25) and two others were in double digits for the day, Bria Smith (10) and Sara Hammond (14).   The Bulls were led in scoring by Courtney Williams who blistered the Cards in the first half of play.  Inga Orekhova, a long ball threat for the Bulls, was held to a single point on the day.   Alisia Jenkins was the only other double-digit scorer for the Bulls, who had all but one player score on the day. 

The Cardinals started the game slow, an all too familiar happening these days.  Courtney Williams scored 16 of her 19 points in the first half.  Half-time adjustments held Williams to just 3 second half points. 

The Cardinals had a good game with scoring 23 points off of 19 turnovers and beat the Bulls on the boards, also scoring 20 second chance points.  In an unusual Louisville stat, the Cardinals had a lone 2 points off the bench. 

The Bulls are no doubt looking for redemption and would love to avenge the recent loss on their home court.  The Cards will need to handle Orekhova again, she is a legitimate 3 point threat who can score in bunches.  Additionally, taming Courtney Williams on the day will go a long way in securing the Cardinal victory. 

As the team heads down the stretch of the season, each game holds added importance.  The Cardinals are currently in a battle when thinking about post season seeding.  We have been talking about it a lot, lately, and for good reason. 
A bad loss, at this point in the season, could remove any chance of a #1 seeding.  As it is, not only will the Cardinals need to take care of their business, they are going to need help from our future friends in the ACC. 

Current thinking has our team with a likely 2 seed in the tournament.  With Louisville, Notre Dame and Stanford all as regional hosts, they will all play on their home court.  Notre Dame and Stanford are projected as 1 seeds, so this leaves two #1 seeds either going to Louisville or Nebraska (the other host of regionals). 
The remaining # 1 seeds are projected to be Connecticut and Duke.   IF the committee follows it’s typical pattern, placing teams closest to their home geographically, Connecticut would come to Louisville.  It goes without saying, we do not want to see Connecticut in Louisville for the regionals. 

In my opinion Duke is the most vulnerable of the #1 seeds.  Here in lies the importance of winning out the season, excepting UConn.    If Louisville can win all games, except UConn, and if Duke could take a couple of losses, Louisville could sneak out a #1 seed.  This is an ideal scenario, thus eliminating facing UConn a potential 4th time on the season (before the championship game).   Duke has a pretty tough remaining schedule, Notre Dame twice, NC twice, Maryland (who seems to be in a free fall) and NC State (they are a rising program at the moment). 

If we get a #2 seed, I am not sure the selection committee would place UConn in Louisville.   The goal of having teams host regionals (this is the only year it is going to happen) is to increase fan attendance.  Pitting UConn against a team for a potential 4th time is not the way to increase butts in the seat.  I project UConn goes to Nebraska.  If Duke maintains it’s projected #1 seed, I think we see Duke in Louisville.  However, this is going against geographic placement, which the committee historically relies heavily on. 

I have digressed a bit here.  However, it all goes to the importance of winning.  Beating USF is one step closer to controlling our own fate. 

Lest you be caught unaware, after today’s game against USF, the Cardinals only have 4 regular season home games left.  Do you need me to spell it out for you?  That means after today, there are only 4 games left to see Shoni Schimmel, Tia Gibbs, Antonita Slaughter and Asia Taylor.  4 games. 

It is hard to imagine this program without Schimmel, Taylor, Gibbs and Slaughter.  The clock is ticking my friends.  You do not want to miss this dynamic group of players.  Get in your seats.  If you are not a season ticket holder, get downtown and buy yourself a seat in what has to be the greatest value around for 2 hours of quality entertainment.   I expect tickets to be going fast as this incredible class winds down their collegiate careers. 

Tick tock, tick tock.

Jenny o’bryan

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Volleyball also held their banquet Saturday. Being a Fall sport instead of a Spring sport like
Lacrosse, this banquet was a celebration of the season completed and of the seniors that are graduating and moving on to new chapters of their life.

Emceed by the inimitable Sean Moth (Voice of The Cards), the program featured an opportunity for each senior to address the crowd and share their thanks to various people who have supported them on their journey.


Several awards were presented, including the Team GPA award, won by setter Katie George on the strength of her 4.0 GPA in the fall semester, as well as The Cardinal Award presented to Nicole Alderson who is the Academic Advisor for the Volleyball. Nicole is credited with supporting the team in achieving over a 3.5 GPA for the Fall semester.


Coach Anne Kordes was the featured speaker and she spoke very highly of the graduating seniors, along with some comments about some of the other players...apparently she thinks Maya McClendon needs to eat more. Maya made a show of eating more chocolate cake in response.


We also heard a bit about what each of the graduating seniors are planning for next steps in their lives. Carly Sahagian wants to do event planning. Randi Ewing will be finishing up her Masters in Communication and is currently interning with WLKY with hopes of landing a Sports Broadcasting position. Brooke Mattingly will be completing her Masters in Art and is planning on becoming an Art teacher...as an aside, if you've ever seen any of her artwork, much of it in sculpture, you know that it is simply amazing. Emily Juhl will be starting Dental School here at UofL in July. And lastly, Caitlin Welch is doing some volleyball coaching at the club level and is hoping to coach for a high school as well...I suspect she is hoping to continue playing volleyball at higher levels as well and will be keeping my eyes peeled for her name in connection to US National Team Programs.


While focused on the past season, we also get a glimpse of the future. Liberos Eleni Georgiafandis and Roxanne McVey were both in attendance having enrolled in the spring semester.


Janelle Jenkins was unable to attend as she is in Texas with her family mourning the passing of her grandfather.

ALSO, THE LATEST BROADCAST OF CARDINAL COUPLE RADIO IS UP AND ON THE SOUNDCLOUD. COME HAVE A LISTEN AT THE LINK BELOW!

MAMA, THOSE PEOPLE ARE ON THE INTERNET AGAIN !!

Jeff
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Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Tuesday Cardinal Couple - Volleyball Wrap-Up



TUESDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

( Staff columnist and legendary Volleyball fan "Worldwide" Jeff McAdams presents his wrap-up on the 2013 volleyball season for the University of Louisville Cardinals.)



Another season of Louisville Volleyball has reached its conclusion.  While its always a disappointment to end the season with a loss, its always good to keep in mind that its really quite rare to end a season with a win.  Ending the season with a loss in the first round of the NCAA tournament is particularly disappointing, however.

A Rebuilding Year

Early in the season, and even in pre-season, we discussed how difficult it was going to be for UofL to replace the 70% of the offense that graduated last year with Lola Arslanbeckova, Gwen Rucker, Kaitlyn James, and Tanya Lukyanenko; and that proved to be a big challenge for this team indeed.

Specifically, replacing Lola's outside hitting wasn't really possible.  While Maya McClendon and Janelle Jenkins displayed amazing talent and skills, as freshmen (Janelle having redshirted last year) they were not able to bring the maturity and precision of a senior world-class hitter like Lola.  Keep your eye on them because in the coming years, they will definitely be forces to reckon with.

In the middle, we were concerned about who would take over for Gwen Rucker.  We have two freshmen middles in Sydney Cooper, and Brooke Betts, but neither saw much playing time.  Brooke spent the early season recovering from an ACL that happened midway through her senior year of high school, entered a match, and promptly tore her ACL again.  Sydney has been developing, and saw a little bit of playing time, but will need more development to contribute valuable playing time.  Our saving grace in the middle was a timely transfer in Randi Ewing.  Having graduated from Fordham with a year of playing eligibility remaining, Randi came to UofL to play for a year and did a reasonable job of replacing Gwen Rucker.  To say only "reasonable" is not a slam on Randi, but rather acknowledgement that Gwen left some very big shoes to fill.

Some Real Bright Spots

So what went well this year?  Well, we've talked about these points all season, and already touched on one or two in the above paragraphs.

Janelle Jenkins and Maya McClendon are a fearsome duo that have been super great fun to watch.  They are dynamic and powerful hitters, and with some refinement from playing another year or two are going to be a serious threat to any team in the country.

Katie George at setter plays well above the level you would expect from a sophomore.  She's consistent and has great athleticism getting to passes even when they aren't on the mark and can do amazing things with them.  She frequently made back sets to the right side and quick sets to middle hitters that left me with the classic fan's response, "No! No! YES!!!" when she made a set that I thought was ill-fated, but she pulled it off, and in style.  Katie is a big part of the reason that I really wish the NCAA would tighten up on double-touch calls on sets.  Her setting is precise and clean, and tighter calls would benefit us because most setters would get called with double-touches more frequently than Katie would.

Haley Pouliezos was at least half a step, if not a full step, faster than she was last year in getting to and digging hits.  Her passing was generally on target, though she did seem to struggle a little bit with serve receives of float serves (serves where there is no spin on the ball and it behaves like a knuckle-ball in baseball and is very hard to predict where its going).

As mentioned above, Randi Ewing was a real force in the middle, but on the other side of the rotation, Brooke Mattingly may have been even more impressive.  Truth be told, watching Brooke play her first year of play (she redshirted her first year), I didn't ever expect her to be a major impact player at UofL, but boy am I happy to have been wrong on that one.

Emily Juhl came back for an impressive senior campaign as well.  I have, of course, written a number of times about her booming serves and impressive hitting, but I feel like I need to mention them again.  Knowing how much she was bothered by stress fractures in her leg her sophomore season, and taking her junior season and more to really recover from the surgery to insert a rod in her bone, it was absolutely wonderful to see her have a good season of play.

Last, but definitely not least, Caitlin Welch was one of the best Libero's in the nation, at least by my estimation.  Caitlin has aspirations of playing on the US National Team, and I think she has the skills to do it.  Combine an almost eery sixth sense for where to be to dig hits with great athleticism and quickness, a fearlessness to go wherever she needs to go to get the digs, and the physical robustness to dive, roll and, bounce off of whatever obstacles might be in her way without getting injured, and you have a libero that can get to, and pass with great precision to keep plays alive that I thought were sure kills.

What Does Next Year Look Like?

We graduate 5 players this year.  Carly Sahagian, Randi Ewing, Brooke Mattingly, Emily Juhl, and Caitlin Welch have all finished their eligibility for volleyball and none have any aspirations of playing any other sports that I'm aware of.

Carly has only seen limited playing time due to perennial knee issues, so losing her isn't really going to hurt us as a team very much, to be honest.  Carly has been a great teammate and supporter, but she hasn't been able to contribute much on the court.

Losing Randi Ewing and Brooke Mattingly each individually would be a blow to the team as they
have both been strong presences in the middle this year.  To lose the pair of them together brings back some of the angst I had in the past off-season about what we were going to do in the middle blocker position.  Last year we only lost Gwen Rucker, but didn't have any other middles on the team.  This year we lost both of our starting middle blockers, but on the other hand, do have Brooke Betts and Sydney Cooper that have been on the sidelines.  We also have two signed recruits that are middles coming in for next year.  Maggie Dejong and Tess Clark will be freshmen middles.  (For our readers looking for height, Tess Clark is 6'4".)  I don't expect our middle blocking and hitting next year to be up to the calibre that we have experienced in the past years with Randi, Brooke, and Gwen; and going back further to players like Lecia Brown.  We will have players to play the position, but I suspect it will be another year or two before any of them are playing with confidence and at the level that we're used to seeing.

The graduation of Emily Juhl takes away an offensive weapon.  Losing Randi and Brooke together leaves us very thin in the middle position overall.  Losing Emily doesn't have that same effect.  We have other outside hitters that are good and getting better.  We will need more, but we have other offensive weapons that we can adjust our game around.



Caitlin Welch will not be directly replaced.  Yes, we will have a player wearing a different colored jersey than the rest of the team playing the libero position, but it will be a long time, if ever, before we find as effective of a libero as Welch.  Haley Pouliezos seems to be the likely candidate for the libero position for next year, and she has advanced and developed quite a bit as a player this season, but I'll be very surprised if she will demonstrate the kind of effectiveness on defense that Caitlin contributed.  Again, this isn't intended to be a slight of Haley's skills and contributions, but a recognition that very few can achieve the same level of play as Caitlin Welch.  Courtney Robison should be available to play as a Defensive specialist next year, which is important to have a DS that can sub in for offensive hitters that really just aren't up to playing a full rotation.  Courtney is currently recovering from surgery to repair a torn labrum in her hip.

Overall, I think we'll be a slightly improved team next year.  We're losing some key players to graduation, and will have some challenges in the middle, but other roles should be covered pretty well.

I'll be looking forward to the beginning of the season in September.


jeffmcadams


( EDITOR'S NOTE...23-8 is not a bad season for Anne Kordes' crew and the 18-0 mark in AAC Conference play will probably never be matched. The Cards struggled early in non conference play that saw them facing numerous top-25 schools and NCAA Tournament participants. The bar does need to be set to the next level and subsequently cleared by Kordes and her staff, though. The rebuilding process needs to make the VolleyCards a contender in tougher ACC competition in 2014 and further down the road. My guess is the Cards may take a step back in 2014 with leaders Juhl, Welch, Mattingly, Kvitle and Ewing gone. There is hope for the future in Jenkins, McClendon, George and Pouliezos, though and it'll be interesting to see how the Cards fare against a conference that sent four schools to the 'big dance' but just has one still left alive (Florida State).

Paulie
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Friday, December 6, 2013

Friday Cardinal Couple -- Cards begin NCAA Volleyball quest today



FRIDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

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Click the link below to hear Coach Walz's announcment:

COACH WALZ DISCUSSES NITA



******************************FINAL********************************

THE SEASON IS ALSO OVER FOR LOUISVILLE VOLLEYBALL...LOSING IN STRAIGHT SETS TO MARQUETTE THIS EVENING 25-23, 25-22, 25-18
IN FIRST ROUND NCAA TOURNAMENT ACTION
                         IN CHAMPAIGN, IL.



           *************BREAKING NEWS*************

NITA SLAUGHTER'S SEASON IS OVER. A BLOOD CLOT DISCOVERED IN HER LUNG. A CARDIAC EVENT CAUSED COLLAPSE IN MSU GAME. TEAMMATES ARE STUNNED AND SHOCKED ACCORDING TO SOURCES.

            ***********************************************

-Louisville Volleyball faces Marquette today

-Volleyball gets several AAC honors

-Teddy Ballgame -- Cards headed to Mouseville


The VolleyCards participate in first round NCAA Volleyball action today...drawing the Marquette Golden Eagles in Champaign, IL.  The match is schedule for 5:30 p.m. and the winner will face the winner of the Morehead St. vs. Illinois contest.

M.U. and Louisville have a knowledge of each other, familiarity and history. The squads did battle three times in the 2012 season...Louisville winning all three matches, including the BIG EAST Tournament finals. Marquette is ranked this year, coming into today's action 24th. in the nation.

It is a tough first round match-up for Louisville. Marquette took the BIG EAST volleyball tournament with a 3-1win over Creighton. A weakened conference with Louisville, Notre Dame, Syracuse and Pitt gone..but still an impressive season for the Golden Eagles.

OMAHA, Neb. - The No. 24 Marquette women's volleyball team won the 2013 BIG EAST Championship by defeating Creighton, 3-1, on Saturday, Nov. 30, at D.J. Sokol Arena.
It was the first BIG EAST volleyball crown for Marquette, which entered the championship and as the league's regular-season champion and top seed.
The Golden Eagles (25-5) claimed the league's automatic NCAA Championship bid and will compete in the tournament for the third straight year.

The AAC does not sponsor a conference tournament.

If Louisville can get by Marquette and (most likely) Illinois, they would move to regional action. Regional sites are in Lexington, Champaign, Lincoln, NE and Los Angeles.

No TV or radio for this one that we know of. Our staff columnist Jeff McAdams is in Champaign to witness the wide net action...but failed to respond to texts about coverage here at CARDINAL COUPLE or the radio show Saturday.

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Nice honors for the team from the AAC. Caitlin Welch received Libero of the Year honors, Maya McClendon Freshman of the Year and Anne Kordes Coach of the Year.

Five Cards made the AAC first team...Katie George, Emily Juhl, Brooke Mattingly, Maya McClendon and Caitlin Welch.
Randi Ewing received second team honors.

Amazingly, a South Florida player...Erin Fairs...was named conference player of the year. A slap in the Cards face, no doubt related to the fact that Louisville is only in the AAC for this year. Any of Louisville's first team players were deserving of the award and Louisville did go 18-0 in conference play.

What else would you expect, though, from a conference that didn't hold a tournament and chooses Memphis and Temple as travel partners?

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FINALLY, CONGRATULATIONS TO THE LOUISVILLE FOOTBALL TEAM FOR FINISHING 11-1 IN THE REGULAR SEASON AND GETTING AN INVITE TO THE RUSSELL ATHLETIC BOWL IN ORLANDO, FL. ON DEC. 28TH.

THE CARDS WON AN EXCITING BATTLE IN CINCINNATI LAST NIGHT 31-24 IN OVERTIME. IF TEDDY BRIDGEWATER ISN'T THE PLAYER OF THE YEAR IN THE AAC THEN THE WHOLE BUNCH OF 'EM AT CONFERENCE HEADQUARTERS ARE MORE STUPID THAN BEETLE BAILEY.

BRIDGEWATER WAS AMAZING LAST NIGHT, PUTTING THE CARDS ON HIS BACK AND CARRYING THEM IN THE FOURTH QUARTER TO REGAIN THE LEAD TWICE AND THEN TO THE WINNING TD IN OVERTIME.

WE DON'T USUALLY COVER FOOTBALL HERE AT CC, BUT WHEN WE DO...WE PREFER DOS EQUIS  SEEING TEDDY TOUCHDOWN TRIUMPH. 

ENJOY MOUSEVILLE, FOOTBALL FANS!

paulie

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Saturday, November 23, 2013

Saturday Cardinal Couple -- Volleyball remains undefeated in AAC



SATURDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

-Volleyball sweeps Bearcats on Senior Night in YUM!


The VolleyCards may only be a participant in the American Athletic Conference, AAC, The American or whatever you want to call it for a year...but they well may be setting a record that no future volleyball teams in the league will ever match.

They've played 16 conference games. They've won all 16. It's the type of dominance that Louisville football hoped they would achieve in the conference this season. It's a goal for both basketball teams on campus to try and mirror. Sandy Pearsall will hope for similar results this spring...but, for now...Anne Kordes' wide net killer are "all and 0" in the league.

The Year of the Cardinal is alive and strong in the YUM! practice facility, Cardinal Arena and the KFC YUM! Center when it comes to serve, dig, set and kill.

Cincinnati was the latest victim of the Cardinal blitzkrieg Friday night in the KFC YUM! Center. It was senior night and senior outside hitter Emily Juhl gave the fans a show to observe with 13 kills in the 25-12, 25-15, 25-22 sweep by UofL.

We've read our columnist Jeff McAdams lofty praise and kudos for the Louisville native and she earned all the accolades and more Friday night...along with senior teammates Brooke Mattingly, Caitlin Welch, Hannah Kvitle and Carly Sahagian.

The first game was tightly contested until Louisville used a 11-1 run to break open a 7-6 score and command a 18-7 lead. The Cards got back-to-back service aces from Welch and Mattingly's improbable flip shot over the net while on her knees was the final nail in the 13-point win.

UofL took a 5-1 advantage early in the second game but UC rallied to get within two at 12-10. Louisville responded with 12 of the next 16 points to put it out of reach and Mattingly
produced the game winner again to give Anne Kordes a ten point triumph.

The Bearcats roared out to a 5-1 lead in the final game but Juhl and crew responded by winning 12 of the next 15 points to build a 13-8 advantage. Cincy stayed close the rest of the way...down by two when Emily Juhl slammed home the game, set and match winner.

Louisville plays their final two in cozy Cardinal Arena before awaiting their NCAA verdict. UConn comes in for the beatdown Wednesday night at 7 p.m.

The AAC didn't get around to scheduling a conference tournament this season. Can you really blame them for not subjecting the Cardinal opponents to more abuse and slaughter? The other nine schools participating in the leagues' volleyball schedule must be getting awfully tired of the Cardinal set and kill dominance.

What started out as a learning curve with a few bumps and bruises has turned into a season that's become a very speedy expressway with  the ladies who hang out on Floyd Street behind the wheel.

Although the Cards are ranked 30th. in the latest NCAA poll, consider this...the squad has only lost one match in two months. Twenty opponents have faced them and UofL has hung a "L" on nineteen of them. Kentucky (who defeated the Cards very early in the season on two horrible SEC officiating calls during the final stages of the fifth game in Lexington) is 6th. in the nation.

Bring on the rematch...NCAA. Time for a little payback.



-paulie

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Tuesday, November 19, 2013

A New Game



TUESDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

( COLUMNIST AND RADIO PERSONALITY "WORLDWIDE" JEFF MCADAMS BRINGS US THE TUESDAY EDITION OF CARDINAL COUPLE AND INTRODUCES A NEW GAME TO US TODAY. WE THINK YOU'LL LIKE THIS GAME AS MUCH AS WE DO! )



I'd like to play a new game.  I'm going to call it, "What Does It Take..."  I think we're starting to find out some of the answers to this game, so now seems like a good time to start.

...For Emily Juhl to Get Recognition?

OK, its no secret that I'm a fan of Emily Juhl.  I've had the opportunity to get to know her a bit over the past few years, and have a great respect for her as a volleyball player and a person.

I'm thrilled, then, to see her start to get some of the recognition that she deserves.  Now, its not like she's been completely in the shadows, as she was one of the two UofL volleyball players to get The American Conference's preseason co-player of the year nod, along with Brooke Mattingly.  She has also made the weekly awards honor role once or twice.

Part of the reason she hasn't gotten quite as much attention in the volleyball arena is that she played the past two years at less than 100%...her sophomore year playing on a leg with stress fractures when UofL had, at times, only 9 players available for play.  After that season, quietly undergoing surgery...essentially the same surgery that garnered Kevin Ware a Top 10 list on Letterman...meaning that her junior season was spent at less than 100%, recovering.  Now that Juhl is back at 100%, she's tearing the court up, and finally starting to get the recognition that she deserves.

The American Conference graced Emily with a Player Of The Week this week...finally.  What did it take?  It took UofL winning two matches, both 3-0 sweeps, and in doing so clenching the conference championship and automatic NCAA tournament bid.  It took Emily hitting an error-free .509 with 27 kills on the weekend...stellar numbers for an outside hitter.  I'll point out that Juhl has seen time attacking from both the right and left side, and even on occasion, going up the middle, as well as getting called on for some back-row attacks at times as well.  She's not just an attacker, though, with 5 digs on the defensive side of the balance sheet this weekend, as well as getting credit for 3 total blocks, despite only being 5'10".  Oh, and let's not forget the two aces she added with her booming serve.  Essentially, Emily will do anything the team needs on the volleyball court...well, she would probably balk if you asked her to be a setter, but if the team really needed it, I'm sure she'd give it a try.

While we're talking about Volleyball honors

Maya McClendon has not had any trouble getting recognition from The American Conference, and well-deserved recognition it is.  Maya gets her sixth Freshman of the Week award from The AAC.  18 kills and 31 digs across the six sets that UofL played this weekend earned her another spot in her familiar role as the freshman with the most kills per set (3.33) in the conference.

...For Jude Schimmel to get Respect From Cardinal Couple Commenters

Sorry commenters, but I've been saying that many of you all have been short-selling Jude for a while now.  I'm just glad that so many of you are coming around on this issue.

Jude has had my respect for a while now.  IN addition to her role as the alpha in the attack yorkie pack where she has played lock-down defense since she first hit the KFC Yum! Center floor, we're now seeing the evidence that a 5'6" player can hold their own driving down the lane and shooting against players nearly a foot taller.  Let's not forget about the steady diet of rebounds by aggressively blocking out larger and taller players and having the court sense to be in the right place at the right time.  You do remember who it was that started the break that resulted in Shoni's backwards-shot-over-Griner and-one circus shot, right?  Yup, little sister Jude with the excellent block-out and outlet pass.  Oh yeah, she really should've gotten the foul call, too.  Take a look at the video if you don't remember it...you'll have to look quickly at the beginning because most of the video focuses on Shoni.

Now, let's remember this when we're talking about the coming emergence of 5'5" Monny Niamke and 5'6" Starr Breedlove as well as future recruiting classes.

( editor note: I COULDN'T AGREE MORE WITH JEFF'S ASSESSMENT OF JUDE SCHIMMEL. TALK ABOUT A BLUE COLLAR, WORKING CLASS HERO! SHE DOES THE JOB, DOES IT TO COMPLETION AND WITHOUT FANFARE OR THE ACCOLADES THAT OTHER PLAYERS RECEIVE. IT'S WHAT MAKES A TEAM GREAT...PLAYERS CONTRIBUTING FOR THE OVERALL GOOD OF THE SQUAD. AS RICK PITINO SAYS...YOU PLAY FOR THE NAME ON THE FRONT OF THE JERSEY, NOT THE BACK.)

-JEFF MCADAMS

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Monday, October 28, 2013

Monday Cardinal Couple -- Volleyball, Field Hockey get wins



MONDAY CARDINAL COUPLE

- Stick Cards romp 'Nova 5-1

- Volleyball sweeps UConn

- Soccer will be #2 seed in AAC Tournament


SLOSS HELPS HANG LOSS ON NOVA

Louisville Field Hockey improved to 13-4 on the season with a convincing 5-1 win at Villanova Sunday afternoon. The Cards are 5-1 in BIG EAST play and in a three-way tie for first with Connecticut and ODU.

Shannon Sloss contributed two goals in the victory, which dropped Villanova to 3-11 and 0-6 in the BIG EAST.

Louisville got their first score from Becca Maddock six minutes into the game. Three minutes later, Sloss picked up her first score. The Cards completed first half scoring when Mallory Mason found net on a penalty shot.

The Cards wasted no time making it 4-0 when the second half began. Sloss rebounded a shot from Victoria Stratton just two minutes into the final frame and drove it home for her second score of the afternoon. With nine minutes expired in the second half...Alyssa Voelmle also converted on a penalty stroke to make it 5-0 Cards.

The Wildcats got their lone goal with 10 minutes left in the contest.

The Cards return home for contests against Providence Friday night at 6 p.m. It'll be the BIG EAST regular season closer. Kent State comes in Sunday for Senior Day.

With the win, the Cards have clinched a spot in the BIG EAST Championships...which will be held Nov 8th and 10th at UConn.

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DOGS NO MATCH FOR BIRDS AT THE WIDE NET


(THANKS TO NANCY WORLEY FOR THE VOLLEYBALL REPORT BELOW...)


Volleyball Sweeps UConn



Brooke Mattingly hit .500 against the Huskies.

Brooke Mattingly hit .500 against the Huskies.
    Brooke Mattingly had 12 kills and six blocks to lead the University of Louisville to a 25-13, 25-19, 25-16 win over UConn to stay unbeaten in the American Athletic Conference volleyball Sunday afternoon in Storrs, Conn. in a nationally televised match on ESPNU.   "Emily Juhl did a phenomenal job of filling in for the injured Haley Pouliezos and her passing kept us in system and allowed the middles to hit .500 and .625 which opened up the outsides on the pins. Juhl's serves kept UConn out of system and she is a heck of a weapon back at the service line," said U of L head coach Anne Kordes.   Juhl had 10 kills with 11 digs and three aces. Maya McClendon had her eighth double-double of the season with 10 kills and 11 digs. She also posted a pair of aces. U of L, 14-8, 9-0, hit .333 on the match and outblocked the Huskies 8-3 with eight total aces.   In the first set, U of L used a 5-0 run early and then slowly pulled away from the Huskies, who were hampered by .091 hitting. Louisville put together a 7-2 run late for the 25-13 win. The Cards hit .452 and had two blocks and four aces, three of which were from Juhl. Brooke Mattingly connected for five kills and two blocks.   In the second set, UConn tied at five and then built a 10-8 lead. The team traded points until Katie George served for four straight including an ace to give U of L some breathing room at 15-12 and force the Huskies to burn their final timeout. The Cards had a 9-4 run late for the 25-19 win.


In the third set, the Cards roared out to a 12-4 lead but UConn's .081 hitting quelled their comeback attempt as the Huskies fell 25-16.

IN AN EFFORT TO BRING YOU THE BEST SPORTS COVERAGE POSSIBLE...WE OFFER THIS EXCLUSIVE HALFTIME HUSKIES LOCKER ROOM CHAT. ENJOY


WHAT IF I DON'T WANT TO?



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KICKIN' CARDS WILL HOST QUARTER FINAL MATCH


The University of Louisville women's soccer team finished second in league play in the AAC...ending up there after UCF took down SMU 1-0 yesterday on the final day of regular season play.

The first opening round matchup will be played between No. 7 seed Memphis (11-7-0, 4-5-0 American) and No. 10 seed Houston (1-11-3, 0-9-0 American) on Friday, Nov. 1 at Cardinal Park in Louisville, Ky. Tiger freshman Valerie Sanderson is tied for top in the league with 13 goals on the season, while Cougar keeper Cami Koski has been one of The American's top performers between the pipes this year, totaling 90 saves and maintaining the highest save percentage at .818.


The Cards will get the winner of the Friday match on Sunday at a time to be announced.

Final AAC standings:

Championship SeedingNo. 1 UCF
No. 2 Louisville
No. 3 Rutgers
No. 4 UConn
No. 5 USF
No. 6 Cincinnati
No. 7 Memphis
No. 8 SMU
No. 9 Temple
No. 10 Houston


Louisville (12-4-1, 8-1-0 American) claimed the No. 2 seed, finishing second in the regular-season
standings. The Cards will host the opening round matchup of Memphis versus Houston on Nov. 1, and face the winner two days later in the quarterfinals. Louisville secured their spot following a 5-4 overtime thriller over Cincinnati on Friday. Heading into the Championship, senior midfielder Charlyn Corral is The American's individual points leader, tied for first in the league with 13 goals and standing alone at the top with 36 points, averaging 2.12 per game.


So...we get at least one more chance to see the Cards play at Cardinal Park for the 2013 season. Let's show up huge in attendance this Sunday to cheer Louisville women's soccer on in this one!

-PAULIE

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