Mon, Nov 17, 2003 - [Volleyball]

MOUNT VERNON -- While the Brewton-Parker College volleyball team's
initial reaction to finishing second in the Georgia-Alabama-Carolina
Conference postseason tournament Saturday was disappointment, the
plaque the Lady Barons received offered so much more in recognizing
their weekend achievements.Brewton-Parker, which served as host of
the GACC's volleyball tourney for the first time, entered the
seven-team tournament as the No. 4 seed and defeated the Nos. 1 and 3
seeds en route to qualifying for the championship match Saturday at the
Student Activities Center.
Playing in their third match Saturday, after losing the
championship semifinal to No. 2 seed Faulkner University (Ala.) and
moving into the title round with a sweep of No. 3 seeded Southern
Wesleyan University (S.C.), the Lady Barons had little left to
challenge Faulkner again.
Considering that through its first six seasons of volleyball,
Brewton-Parker had won as many as three GACC matches just one time --
during last season's 31-12 run -- and defeated top-seeded Georgia
Southwestern State University for the first time Friday, Bryant was
pleased with the Lady Barons' tournament result.
"A few years ago, nobody would have thought Faulkner would be
playing Brewton-Parker for the championship," said Bryant, whose team
was 7-5 in the GACC regular season. "I think our program is becoming
one of the most respected programs in the conference."
The Lady Barons' conference tournament run began Thursday when they
defeated No. 5 seed Shorter College in three straight games. "It was an
ugly win but a win nevertheless," Bryant said. "We really had to beat
Shorter because we wanted to be in the position to beat Southwestern."
Georgia Southwestern entered the tournament as the No. 1 seed after
winning the regular-season championship. However, the Lady 'Canes were
coming off their only conference loss, to Faulkner, four nights earlier
in the GACC regular-season finale.
The Lady Barons opened the match by winning the first 10 points and took the first
game 30-19.
Despite losing the second game 30-28 after rallying from a 29-22 deficit, Bryant
saw encouraging effort from his team.
"Even in the game we lost, I think we made a statement there that
we were not going away," he said. "Volleyball is a game that rides so
much on momentum, but I just want my girls to play one point at a time
and not let momentum take over."
Brewton-Parker forged ahead in the third game 9-2 and led 24-12 before taking
a 2-1 lead with a 30-20 game win.
Southwestern took a 5-3 lead in the fourth game, but the Lady
Barons won the next four points to take a lead it never relinquished
and ended the match with a 10-4 run for a 30-23 game win and 3-1 match
count.
"We played really well. If had had one go give, I would give a game
ball to Nicole Behning (senior from Jacksonville, Fla.) for her
back-row play. But it takes a team effort to beat somebody that good."
After receiving a pass into the championship semifinal match
Saturday morning, Brewton-Parker battled Faulkner for three tough games
but the Lady Eagles came out on top of each and thus relegated the Lady
Barons into the elimination bracket.
"Every game was tight and we thought we had a chance to beat them,
but they are so fast that anything we hit their way it seemed like they
would dig it out," Bryant said.
Southern Wesleyan eliminated Georgia Southwestern (21-20) in the
next match, leaving Brewton-Parker against the Lady Warriors (17-20)
for a berth in the championship round.
"I told them in the locker room that we couldn't hold anything back
against Southern Wesleyan," said Bryant, whose squad won three
hard-fought games 30-22, 30-25 and 30-28. "The girls have gotten to
where they are mentally tough, and we are playing really well."
Faulkner's extra rest and speed proved too much for the Lady Barons
in the final, with the Lady Eagles (31-19) winning the first two games
30-18 and 30-17 before overcoming Brewton-Parker's early leads in the
third to complete the match with a 30-22 win in Game 3.
"We were tired," Bryant said. "There was no gas left after we had to give it all
in the Southern Wesleyan match."