August 20, 2012
Note: A video interview with sophomore OH Chelsea Albers is being uploaded to KU Athletics’ media FTP to assist in your coverage
of the Jayhawks. You can access those files by clicking this link (https://www.onlinefilefolder.com/3faIKUcN55wzIY)
and using “kansasjayhawks12” as the password. We’ll have the video up as soon as possible.
Kansas Volleyball 2012 Season Outlook: Outside Hitters
LAWRENCE, Kan. – In the first of a four-part series, the Kansas volleyball season outlook
begins with an in-depth look at the outside hitters.
AT A GLANCE
Armed
with an All-Big 12 Preseason selection and voted to the highest finish
in the league since 2005, Kansas will look for its fourth-straight
winning season and a trip to the NCAA Tournament in 2012.
In his 15th season at Kansas, coaching veteran Ray Bechard and the Jayhawks return to the court after a 15-14 season, marking the 10th
time Bechard’s squad finished at .500 or better. The Jayhawks finished
the year narrowly missing an NCAA Tournament bid after coming in at No.
47 in the final RPI ranking. In 2012, KU’s mission for a postseason
berth only mounts as the team hunts for its first
trip to the tournament since 2005.
With
five starters and the libero returning to lead the team, Bechard and
his staff have options to replace KU’s single-season kills leader in
Allison Mayfield. In all, 12 of the 17 players on the KU roster are
upperclassmen. Although the program only has two seniors on the roster,
not including graduate student-transfer Sylvia Bullock, Bechard knows
leadership avenues exist all throughout his team.
“It’s
a shared responsibility,” Bechard said. “Plus, we have such a large
junior class. (Caroline) Jarmoc and (Catherine) Carmichael have been
in the program as long as our two seniors. They are fourth-year players
with each having a redshirt year. Then you have a fifth-year Sylvia
Bullock, who is new to the game but not new to competing and leading. We
have a lot of upperclassmen in juniors and
seniors, but for our two seniors (Tayler) Tolefree we want it to be a
special year for her, and (Morgan) Boub too, having spent a lot of time
in the program. But we need a special year from everyone.”
OUTSIDE HITTERS
Returned: So. Chelsea Albers; Jr. Marianne Beal; RS Jr. Catherine
Carmichael; So. Sara McClinton; Jr. Amy Wehrs (also a DS)
Gained: TR-Sr. Sylvia Bullock; Fr. Tiana Dockery
Lost: Lauren Hagan, Allison Mayfield
Even
without Mayfield, who broke the Kansas single-season record last year
with 462 kills during her senior campaign, the Jayhawks still return
nearly 70 percent of their offense from a year ago. Bechard is looking
forward to the balanced offense that results after the graduation of a
former go-to player.
This
season, sophomores Chelsea Albers and Sara McClinton will have the
opportunity to prove that their starting roles as freshmen has the duo
ready to shoulder more weight in year two. According to Bechard,
McClinton has the ability to compete at a level that matches her Big 12
counterparts and now her focus is consistency. With Albers, Bechard can
see her transitioning into a six-rotation player.
In 2011, Albers approached the 100 kills (111), digs (171) and blocks
(84) mark, the closest of any Jayhawk over the year.
After
redshirting her freshman season, Catherine Carmichael enters her junior
season with her fourth year of experience. Like most of the team’s
versatile outside hitters, Carmichael has the ability to play from both
the left and right side. In her only start last season, she took full
advantage, racking up a career-high 10 kills at Baylor. Also described
as a multi-faceted player by her coach, junior
Marianne Beal can step in on both sides as well as play the middle when
need be.
A
pair of newcomers will add depth to the position in freshman Tiana
Dockery and senior-transfer Sylvia Bullock. Dockery is predicted to have
the quickest impact among the Jayhawks’ four newcomers this fall, as
Bechard speaks highly of her primary passing skill, consistent swings
and fundamentally-sound defensive abilities. Bullock comes to Lawrence
following a four-year letterwinner for the top-25
women’s basketball program at Miami. Bullock already has the leadership
qualities and athleticism in place after her time in Florida, but is
currently rebuilding her volleyball savvy that will make her a valuable
asset on the left side.
Head coach Ray Bechard
On replacing four-year starter Allison Mayfield:
“We
started two freshmen in (Chelsea) Albers and (Sara) McClinton last
year, who we didn’t expect to carry a big offensive load. Now those two,
among others, will be asked to do a little more. (Catherine) Carmichael
is ready to step up. We think we can get more offense out of our
middles, as well. Offensively, we will be better served to have a little
bit more balance and spread that around. That
will put more pressure on what we call our pin players – notably
McClinton and Carmichael - and newcomers like Tiana Dockery and Sylvia
Bullock. We’re looking for that group to create a balance for us. We’re
hoping that balance will in turn make us less predictable.
Mayfield will be missed, of course, but when it comes down to end-game
now, hopefully we have a better balance of where our scoring will come
from, which I think got to us a little last year.”
On the offensive core:
“We’ve
got to stay healthy, it’s not a deep group but it’s an interchangeable
group. (Tiana) Dockery, (Catherine) Carmichael, (Chelsea) Albers,
(Sara) McClinton – they can all go right and left, which is good, but
we need two or three people to emerge that are studs and will be
consistent studs night-in and night-out. Last year, our hitting
efficiency numbers were up and down and at that position,
we’ve got to be more consistent.”