Bruins quick to clean up Anteaters with improved hitting, serving

Thursday, February 27, 1997

M. VOLLEYBALL:

Nihipali has less-than-stellar performance in low-pressure game
situationBy Vytas Mazeika

Daily Bruin Contributor

The word of the day is "quick."

First, The UCLA men’s volleyball team defeated UC Irvine (UCI)
in three "quick" games, 15-7, 15-6, 15-7.

Second, the Bruin stomping of the Anteaters was greatly due to
the tremendous timing between true-freshman setter Brandon
Taliaferro and the two "quick" hitters ­ junior Tom Stillwell
and true-freshman Adam Naeve.

And finally, UCLA (8-3, 7-2 Mountain Pacific Sports Federation)
got a lot of "quick" points by out-serving UCI (3-8, 2-6) nine
service aces to one.

UCLA had a great night serving. The Bruins held a 2:1 service
error to ace ratio. Naeve and Ben Moselle both accounted for three
aces while Taliaferro served two. Fred Robins also had one.

Al Scates, UCLA’s Coach, was very pleased with his team’s
hitting performance ­ especially with Stillwell and Naeve, who
hit for percentages of .778 and .765 respectively.

"The improvement was tremendous," Scates said. "We did not hit
really well against Long Beach State on Friday. The quick hitters
had a real problem connecting with the setter."

So Scates and assistant coach Brian Rofer decided that it was
time to make some changes.

"Brian (Rofer) and I looked at a lot of game tapes over the
weekend and identified some problems," Scates said. "We took the
four top quick hitters and had them work with Brandon (Taliaferro)
on Monday and Tuesday on a separate court with coach Rofer.

"And he got it back together. Now they know what to do."

"It is starting to come back," Stillwell said. "I would not say
it is 100 percent there. It is not going to take one match for that
to happen."

Paul Nihipali, UCLA’s Player of the Year candidate, recorded
only 11 kills and hit .350. Then again, in a night where UCLA
outhit UCI .522 to .198 the Bruins did not need to rely on their
go-to guy at all.

"It is hard for Paul (Nihipali) to play in this kind of game
because he was not fired up tonight at all," Scates said. "I can
see the difference.

"Paul does better in the pressure situations, in the big
games."

Even though everything seemed perfect tonight for the Bruins,
Scates and the rest of the team know that with upcoming matches
against MPSF rivals Hawaii and Stanford there can be no
letdown.

"We got into a little slump there," Stillwell said. "But I am
glad (we head to deal with it) now rather than the finals or
playoffs. Because if this is happening toward the end of the season
it is bad news."

With UCLA’s hitting coming around and Paul Nihipali getting
fired up for a big game, the only team with bad news may be UCLA’s
Friday night opponent ­ Hawaii.

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