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Saturday, September 23
Blanton serves up victory in semis


SYDNEY, Australia -- Americans Dain Blanton and Eric Fonoimoana saw red Sunday, and now they have a chance for gold.

Eric Fonoimoana
Eric Fonoimoana celebrates after the United States wins its semifinal match against Portugal at Bondi Beach.
Penalized a point for wasting time in their Olympic beach volleyball semifinal against Portugal's Luis Maia and Joao Brenha, Blanton served two straight aces to begin a five-point run that gave the U.S. team a 15-12 victory and a place in the gold-medal match.

Blanton and Fonoimoana fell on the sand in each other's arms after Brenha was unable to handle Blanton's final serve, prompting U.S. flag-waving by the cheering, sellout crowd at Bondi Beach.

"We didn't come here just to represent our country. We came here to compete and win a medal," Fonoimoana said. "We've accomplished half our goal. We'd like to have a gold medal now."

Their chance comes Tuesday (Monday night EDT) against Brazil's Ze Marco de Melo and Ricardo Santos, who trounced Germany's Jorg Ahmann and Axel Hager 15-5 in the other semifinal. Maia and Brenha meet the Germans for the bronze medal, a match they lost in Atlanta four years ago.

With the U.S. women failing to win a medal in beach volleyball, all hopes for a gold in the sport that originated on the beaches of California rest with Blanton and Fonoimoana.

A partnership for three years, they entered the tournament seeded ninth and have swept through four matches to reach the final against the third-seeded Brazilians, considered gold-medal contenders from the start.

Blanton, 28, and Fonoimoana, 31, began play Sunday by trouncing Rob Heidger and Kevin Wong 15-3 in an all-American quarterfinal.

The semifinal match was a tense, defensive struggle, with Blanton warned twice by referee Peter Hreszczuk of Australia for arguing calls. With Portugal ahead 11-10 after an hour of play, Hreszczuk showed a red card to the Americans for being slow to take the court after a timeout, giving Portugal another point.

Fonoimoana smashed a sideout kill to regain the serve for the Americans, and Blanton went to work. His first serve caught the line to the right for an ace, and his next one did the same on the left to even the score at 12.

With the crowd screaming, Fonoimoana blocked a Brenha shot, and then Blanton lobbed a kill over Brenha to make it 14-12 and match point. It ended when Brenha was unable to handle the next Blanton serve.

"I was just focused," Blanton said of his serving heroics. "I wanted to get aggressive, and get it going."

He said the red card from Hreszczuk "kind of woke us up, fired us up."

"We were at a point where we had to take control of the match or it was going to spin out of control," Blanton said. "There was nothing to be called. There was no decision to be made. An ace is an ace."

In the quarterfinal match, Blanton and Fonoimoana rolled over Heidger and Wong, running off 11 straight points with Blanton repeatedly getting to attempted kills to keep rallies alive.

"To me personally, every other team we played against was in slow motion and these guys were at light speed," Wong said, while Heidger praised Blanton and Fonoimoana for keeping up their intensity throughout the match.

"They really came out on fire," he said. "Usually a team will let up a little bit after the initial push. They kept going full-throttle all game. It kept us off-balance and we were never able to get into it."

Fonoimoana said the main difference between the teams that trained together was that "Dain and I played pretty much a flawless game."

Knowing that Blanton and Fonoimoana will play gold soothes some of the disappointment of the American contingent after the women's teams were ousted Saturday.

Both women's teams were favored, but Jenny Johnson Jordan and Annett Davis fell 15-9 to the surgical precision of Japan's Yukiko Takahashi and Teru Saiki. Holly McPeak and Misty May battled point-for-point with Brazilians Adriana Samuel and Sandra Pires before succumbing 16-14.

Samuel and Pires later lost 15-6 in the semifinals to defending bronze medalists Natalie Cook and Kerri Pottharst of Australia, and Takahashi and Saiki fell to Brazil's world champions, Adriana Behar and Shelda Bede, in a 15-10 match. Behar and Bede will face Pottharst and Cook for the gold medal Monday, after Samuel and Pires take on Takahashi and Saiki for the bronze.


 


   
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