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W. Volleyball Triples Win Total, Emerges as Team to Beat

leggo my kaego
Tor K. Krever

Sophomore KAEGO OGBECHI was named the Ivy Player of the Year in addition to an American Volleyball Coaches Association Northeast Region All American. The Harvard women’s volleyball team tied for second place in the Ivies.

So much improvement rarely brings such little satisfaction.

Despite more than tripling its 2001 Ivy League win total, the Harvard women’s volleyball team finished its season disappointed. It wanted an Ivy title.

After racing to a 9-1 conference mark, the same squad that had finished 3-11 in the Ivies the year before was poised to clinch its first ever league title. With only four matches remaining, Harvard had a half-game lead on defending co-champion Penn, and the Quakers—who had dealt the Crimson its only league loss of the season—were set to visit the Malkin Athletic Center that weekend.

But before Harvard could get its revenge, it dropped a crucial, five-game match to Princeton on Friday night. Penn completed the weekend sweep on Saturday, and the Crimson’s title dream was deferred for at least one more year.

“This weekend was obviously a huge disappointment to us,” junior middle hitter Mariah Pospisil said at the time.

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After splitting a meaningless final weekend, Harvard finished at 10-4, tied with the Tigers for second place behind the Quakers.

But a bad weekend hardly made for a bad season.

Led by captain and setter Mindy Jellin—a second-team All-Ivy selection—Harvard rebounded from a 4-7 non-league record against tough competition to sweep through the early part of its Ivy schedule.

“[Jellin] understands the mission of this team,” Harvard coach Jennifer Weiss said. “She is a great leader.”

The Crimson remained alone in first place for most of the season, and—though the turnaround was decisive—according to some it was hardly surprising.

“I’m not surprised at all [at Harvard’s success],” Penn coach Kerry Carr said before her team’s second meeting with the Crimson. “Harvard was this good last year. They just had a few momentum busters.”

The talent was definitely there. The Crimson played virtually the same lineup as in 2001 (with the exception of Erin Denniston ’01, who was lost to graduation), but with much more success.

The transformation was attributed—at least partly—to an improvement in the team’s dynamic.

“The technical and athletic ability was definitely there [in 2001],” Weiss said. “There were definitely [technical] things we worked on and improved, but team chemistry was our focus.”

Then, of course, there was sophomore Kaego Ogbechie.

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