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(July 27, 2002)
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FIVB Women's Beach
Volleyball Event Features Four Different Semifinalists;
USA's Mcpeak & Youngs
Earn Chance For Third International Crown
Greek Tandem Earns
Semifinal Berth For First-Time
As Greece Hosts First
"Open" International Event In Advance Of 2004 Olympic Games
RHODES, GREECE (July 27, 2002) For only
the fifth time in the 10-plus season history of the women's FIVB Beach
Volleyball World Tour, teams from four different countries have advanced
to an event "final four" here Saturday (July 27) as the United
States seeks to win its sixth-straight Gold Medal this season.
Seeded second in the 32-team Main Draw,
Holly McPeak (Manhattan Beach, Calif.) and Elaine Youngs (Durango,
Colo.) lead the "final four" teams into Sunday final rounds.
Saturday's action saw the first- and third-seeded teams being eliminated
by teams from the Netherlands and Greece, respectively.
Winners of 49 pro beach volleyball
matches in 51 outings on the sand this season ($141,315 in shared
earnings), McPeak and Youngs defeated a pair of United States rivals to
advance to Sunday's "final four. McPeak and Youngs face 11th-seeded
Vassiliki Karadassiou and Efrosyni Sfyri of Greece in the second of two
semifinal matches. It will be the first meeting between the two teams.
With Greece hosting its first
"open" FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour event along with
preparing for the Athens 2004 Olympic Games, the advancement by
Karadassiou and Sfyri "delighted" the crowd. The "final
four" appearance by Karadassiou and Sfyri is the first ever
international "final four" appearance for men's and women's
team from Greece.
McPeak and Youngs eliminated USA rivals
Carrie Busch and Leanne Schuster (21-13, 17-21 and 15-12) and Dianne
DeNecochea and Barbra Fontana (21-17 and 21-13) to advance to Sunday's
play. Karadassiou and Sfyri scored the "biggest" upset in
Greek beach volleyball history by ousting third-seeded Adriana Behar and
Shelda Bede of Brazil (16-21, 21-16 and 15-11).
The Brazilians list two FIVB Beach
Volleyball World Championship Gold Medals (1999 and 2001) and a Silver
Medal at the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games on their resume. Behar and Bede
are the winningest team ever on the FIVB Tour with 26 Gold Medals.
It was not Brazil's day Saturday on the
Greek sand as the country failed to advance a team to a women's FIVB
Beach Volleyball World Tour for only the fifth-time in 88 international
events. While Behar and Bede were losing to the Greek tandem,
fourth-seeded Natalie Cook and Kerri Pottharst were defeating
sixth-seeded Leila Barros of Sandra Pires of Brazil (21-18 and 21-19) to
earn a "final four" berth. The last time a women's team from
Brazil failed to advance to a semifinal was in August 2000 at Dalian,
China.
Cook and Pottharst, who defeated Behar
and Bede for the Sydney Gold Medal, will face 18th-seeded Rebekka Kadijk
and Marritt Leenstra of the Netherlands in Sunday's first semifinal.
Kadijk and Leenstra, who lost to McPeak and Youngs in pool play Friday
morning, advanced to their second FIVB semifinals by eliminating
top-ranked teams from the United States and Brazil.
Kadijk and Leenstra, who will be
competing in their second FIVB semifinal after placing fourth in the
2001 FIVB season finale in Brazil, scored a 21-17 and 21-18 win over
top-seeded Misty May and Kerri Walsh of the United States in their first
elimination match Saturday. The Netherland pair advanced to the
semifinals by downing eighth-seeded Alexandra Fonseca and Mônica
Rodrigues of Brazil 21-18, 16-21 and 15-11. Kadijk and Leenstra's only
setback this week was in their opening pool play match Friday to McPeak
and
Youngs (21-19 and 21-15).
May (Costa Mesa, Calif.) and Walsh
(Saratoga, Calif.), who lost to Kadijk and Leenstra for the first time
in three matches this season between the two teams, posted their lowest
pro beach finish in their last nine starts. The Americans failed to
advance to the "final four" for the first-time since last
August's FIVB Beach Volleyball World Championships in Austria.
Saturday's defeat was only the fifth in
39 matches this season for May and Walsh, who will continue to lead the
FIVB rankings with $100,700 in earnings and 1,590 points. May and Walsh
won the Spain, Switzerland and Canada stops this season and placed
second last week to McPeak and Youngs in France. May and Walsh also
posted a fourth in Norway earlier this month.
DeNecochea (San Diego, Calif.) and
Fontana (Manhattan Beach, Calif.) shared $6,675 for finishing fifth. The
pair has now lost four times to McPeak and Youngs this season, including
three Association of Volleyball Professionals (AVP) Tour title matches
earlier this season in California.
Busch (Hermosa Beach, Calif.) and
Schuster (Manhattan Beach, Calif.), who are also 0-4 against McPeak and
Youngs, split $3,900 for placing ninth. Busch and Schuster won five of
seven matches this weekend with both losses being to American rivals,
including a 21-15 and 21-16 setback Friday to May and Walsh
in pool play.
The top American women remain in Europe
next week for the second FIVB Grand Slam event of the season in
Klagenfurt, Austria (July 31- August 3). While May and Walsh remain on
the international tour for events in Asia (Japan, August 7-11) and
China, August 14-18), the other USA teams return to the United States
for an AVP event in Manhattan Beach, Calif. (August 8-11).
The 2002 women's FIVB Beach Volleyball
World Tour concludes in September with events in Spain (Mallorca, 3-7)
and Brazil (Vitoria, 17-22). The two-year qualifying process for the
Athens 2004 Olympic Games starts at the beginning of the 2003.
[Source: Tim Simmons,
www.bvbinfo.com,303/678-8484; 303/678-7474 (FAX)]
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