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Sunday, October 1
U.S. women impress; men disappoint


SYDNEY, Australia -- The U.S. women's volleyball team struggled for years in the shadow of the men's team. The Sydney Games changed that dramatically: The women soared beyond everyone's expectations, while the men sank further than anyone imagined.

You go, girls! And guys, you go as well -- back to gym and to the drawing board.

The women's team finished fourth, its second-best showing in seven Olympics, next to the bronze in Barcelona.

"I'm really proud of this team. It's a young team. It's their first Olympics, and I think they did really well," Tara Cross-Battle said. "We were coming in here ranked 10th, and nobody believed in us but ourselves."

The men were a disaster, taking 11th place and joining Egypt as the only teams to go 0-5. It continued a distressing trend for the United States, which won gold medals in 1984 and 1988 but fell to bronze four years later and ninth in Atlanta.

"It's a funny game, and unfortunately we're not the ones laughing," said coach Doug Beal.

The women weren't expected to do anything in Sydney. Chris Marlowe, a member of the 1984 men's team and an NBC volleyball analyst, predicted before the games that the Americans would win a medal -- in Athens four years from now.

Yet there they were, in the semifinals against Russia, pushing a better team to its limits before falling in the fifth game. Sure, the team benefited from a favorable draw in their group, which allowed them to avoid Russia until the semis and eventual champion Cuba altogether.

Still, the Americans earned it. They started off by defeating China, and went 4-0 until falling to Brazil in group play. The finest moment in U.S. women's volleyball in years came in the quarterfinals against South Korea, when the team rallied from a 12-9 deficit in the final game to win.

The Americans also impressed with their upbeat demeanor, even after losing to Brazil in the bronze-medal match.

"We felt like we wanted a medal out of this," coach Mick Haley said. "We felt like it was an all-or-nothing thing. We felt like the country wanted us to do that, and we wanted to do that. Because there's not much difference between fifth and 12th."

Haley is moving on, taking over the women's program at Southern California. Cross-Battle isn't coming back, and Danielle Scott -- the only other player who was on the 1996 team -- wants to take another shot at the WNBA.

That still leaves a core of talented young players on the team, led by outside hitter Logan Tom, the 19-year-old from Stanford who already is the best college player in the country. There's also Stacy Sykora, one of the world's top defenders, and Heather Bown, who became the Americans' enforcer at the net.

The U.S. team may never reach the heights of the Cubans, who won their third straight gold medal in thrilling style by rallying from two games down to defeat Russia. But the Americans can always take heart in the fact that Regla Torres, who was 17 when Cuba won its first gold medal in 1992, has to retire sometime.

At one end of the spectrum in the men's tournament was Yugoslavia -- focused, unified, every player doing his little part on every point. The team learned more than anyone else in the field, and improved each time out. It lost to Russia and Italy to start the games, and by the time the 16-day tournament was over, it had beaten Italy and trounced the Russians for the gold medal.

At the opposite end of that great moment was the United States, which got creamed by the Yugoslavs and everyone else it played. The Americans hit their low moment in the final game of group play, when, already out of the tournament, they lost to a backup-filled Italian team in a match that wasn't worth the face value of a seat in the rafters.

"I don't think we could've really put our finger on it," Erik Sullivan said of the team's myriad problems. "If it was just one or two things, we probably could have corrected it. It was kind of a culmination of everything."

The men's team is set for a serious house cleaning, and Beal sounded like a man who didn't want to take four more years of punishment.

The squad has promise, however. Six-foot-7, 255-pound hitter George Roumain is only 24 and could be a one-man demolition crew in Athens if someone can be found to get him the ball where he likes it. And Ryan Millar, 22, can provide instant offense at the other side.

What's needed are blockers. And some heart. And the sacrifice to give up two or three years of youth to move to Colorado Springs and rebuild the program.

Beal is confident such men will be found.

"I'm optimistic we can turn this thing around," he said. "I believe this team is going to get better in the next couple years."


 


   
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