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New Cars, New Shoes, New Money: Life Goes Up for W. Volleyball

Spikers Benefit Most From $250,000 Athletic Department Expansion of Women's Sports

"I won't see a lot of the benefits [of the change]," Garcia said. "I'm a senior, and the extra money for recruiting and traveling obviously affects future teams."

But by attracting more top players and exposing the team to better competition, Harvard's volleyball program will get stronger in the long run.

"The other Ivy League schools are recruiting heavily in California and Florida, where the players tend to be better," Garcia said. "This [change] is going to help a lot by giving us a chance to compete with them." Freshman Heather Rypkema, who starred as a high school player in Washington, D.C., was recruited by Bates before the funding increase and said that the recruiting process was minimal at best.

"It wasn't much then, actually," she said. "I talked to Coach Bates a little bit, I met the players, and I watched a practice. Basically, I got to know the program a little bit before I came to Harvard."

But with the new money, Bates said she would pursue players more aggressively. While she said she had yet to decide the actual steps she would take, past policy would indicate a probable increase in phone calls and mailings to players' homes.

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Bates said that a team trip to California or to Florida (and with it, increased recruiting) would not come in the next year or two, but after that such a trip was 'a definite possibility.'

Enthusiastic

While concrete effects of the recent expansion still seem uncertain for this year's squad, at least, Bates expressed happiness with the change.

"Oh, it's definitely an improvement," she said. "Besides the actual funding, you know, the athletes have always been working hard, and for them to get this is just a real confidence booster."

Curiously, the most tangible benefits received by the volleyball team this year have been the bus for road trips, new uniforms and new shoes--all of which the University paid for at the beginning of the team's season, in mid-September and before the expansion.

"I've seen lots of changes this season," Garcia said. "We used to go almost the whole season without uniforms, but this year we got them right off the bat. And we got new shoes from Reebok."

Sports Information Director John Veneziano confirmed that the equipment purchases had been taken out of the existing budget.

"That money predated the expansion [announced in October]," he said.

Bates pointed to the traditional strength of her team's funding--with or without the recent increase--as the source of those improvements.

"I asked for what I thought the team needed [before the change], and we got it," she said. "It's been that way ever since I got here. The athletic department's been pretty generous in supporting us. Whatever we've needed, we've gotten."

For Bates, the first-year head coach suddenly elevated to full-time status, this is a heady time. With the recent surge in athletic department support of her team, Harvard volleyball is looking up.

"The bottom line," Heit said, "is that with an increased budget comes increased benefits."

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