2022 Volleyball Junior Nationals
What a Great Tourney!
Two weeks prior to the trip to Orlando, the team was 2-12.
Then something happened (a 45-minute team talk prior to a practice?). Something big.
In the Showcase in Anaheim a week before Nationals, we swept the first two days, won the first single elimination match on Sunday before exiting with a loss. Where'd that come from?
Coming into Nationals, they ranked us 1st in our Pool and 5th overall out of 59 teams in 16 Club. (I was very skeptical)
We went 10-0 through the final day. A tourney is a LOT more fun and emotional when you're kicking butt.
A Three Set, back and forth win against Ocean Bay (Tampa) brought us to 11-0.
Louisville Fury, who clearly forged a lot of Birth Certificates, had our number and ended our amazing run.
We take Bronze! A Great Tourney!
Nationals-2022
Post Play
Post
Apologies for the scattershotness of the photos. I was caught up in watching rather than shooting. I missed a bunch of moments and people.
You should be able to right-click to download photos. I also didn't do much post-processing. If there is a shot you like, I do have full-resolution .jpgs and RAW (to make better crops). Let me know.
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- Category: Dash
2019
<<< Note, details are vague in the early years. Feel free to provide me some context >>>
2019 was Dash and Trevor's first year of volleyball, starting with beach.
Not sure where Shahab was this year.
I don't remember much about this season other than it was Dash's first foray outside (overly) competitive basketball. Pulling up to the courts after practice was over, Coach Brooake and Coach Mark were working with Dash and another player. Watching the coaches with the boys, I completely lost it. The last couple of seasons had some really unprofessional coaches. Dash was relaxed and having a good time - and learning. I knew immediately and intrinsically that I could trust Brooke and Mark without any reservations whatsoever. Dash was in good care. That he and I had no longer had to worry about me placing him in an abusive environment overwhelmed me. I'll always be grateful.
Dash and Trev as freshman were not factors in the JV competition. I'm not even sure they were partners, though they did play informally together.
I don't remember much about the season other than all the boys seemed to have a good time.
Indoor
In addition to Varsity and JV, 2019 Indoor had a Freshman/Sophomore team. Ah, the heady lush Pre-Covid days...
By now, both Trevor and Dash had a season of Coast experience (Dash, 14-years old, played on 16u team - all 14-year olds and one 16-year old. They got consistently destroyed, but unlike basketball, they were not physically battered - thank you, net.).
Note from Feb 27:
Note from the Feb 29 "Novice Series" pool event:
"Dash had a good day today. Seven players for the Pool Event. Lots of playing time. Trevor was the best player. Dash was probably second. A much better showing today for all than on Tuesday."
March 6
March 12, 2020
March 13
COVID shuts down the season.
March 26 - 2021!!
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I just received an invite to the Scouting Troop's annual Parents Party.
Yeah, I'm excited about it.
A fresh empty nester now, I'm looking forward to seeing some of the people most responsible for helping our bird thrive outside the nest.
Outside of family and a few teachers and coaches, no one put more talent and effort into uplifting our young teen into becoming a skilled and confident older teen than the parents we met through scouting. They profoundly influenced my son's development - and my own.
I look forward to seeing them again.
I realized also that there would be a lot of new parents I have not yet met. What would I share with them?
I knew very little about Scouting; we joined to fill a need for a structured skills program. We joined the troop with another family, but knew no one in the Troop.
Over a four-year period, these strangers became My People.
My wife and I, late parents of an only child, were very focused and committed to parenting and thought we were providing a broad range of experiences for our son. Scouts opened up much, much broader horizons.
While we had fond memories of club sports, the Scouting Culture was far more impressive. First of all, rather than a coach and small staff teaching a game, it was The Full Village pitching in collectively, continuously, collaboratively, sharing an amazing, impressive range of talents and example.
There was a different attitude here as well. In competitive sports, there is an underlying, unintentional, unsaid understanding that "your child's success may mean mine sitting on the bench." The parents knew this, and as the kids got older, they knew this. There was zero of that here. Here the attitude, stated aloud and backed up by example, was "part of my success is your success and part of your success is helping other's success. We ARE together."
So many skilled, talented mentors talking the talk and walking the walk (and swimming the swim: I was kind of shocked when, for the swim safety training, Fritz jumped right in the (cold) pool without a pause). Nothing halfway here.
"We provide an environment where we encourage kids to try and where it's safe to 'fail' (because it's the opposite of 'failing')." It wasn't just talk, I could see the walk. So when one of the parents was asking for volunteers and emphasized "no experience necessary", I double-checked. "No experience? Are you sure? Most of the Tenderfoots are more skilled than me." "Absolutely. Jump in."
I jumped, and I'm so thankful I did. For so many reasons.
- It helped the troop, which means it helped the kids. Mine. All of them.
- It helped me. I learned a LOT. New skills. Organizational skills. Additional lifelong outdoors skills. Applicable skills.
- The "Leadership Lab" rubbed off on me. If nothing else, I showed that I was not afraid as an adult to fail in this very safe environment - perhaps the most important lesson. Dare to be vulnerable. Walk the Walk.
- Working - a lot - with the other parents. Like many other things in life, diving "all in" is amazingly more enriching than tiptoeing around the shallows. Providing the infrastructure for the scouts to run the troop is a tremendous amount of work. ScoutMasters essentially have a second full time job. Committee members can put in many hours a week. Scout Camping trips take a lot of planning and time. The leadership of the troop have - not to take anything away from those who contribute in all the other ways - dedicated a great deal of themselves, their talent and their time to the kids. Character highly committed to deep valuable service - in their "spare time". These are some of the best people you could meet. It was a privilege to work with these people and I am honored to count them among my friends. Outside of the parenting benefits, these relationships are the most meaningful takeaways from my time with Scouting. I am humbled and enriched.
- I participated actively in the collective example of service to my son. Who knows how "effective" I was/am as a parent? I did some good things, some things I could have done better. Unintentional Consequences haven't all presented themselves. I think he'll be alright. But I do know that my wife and I were all-in with our time and commitment. There were clear visible benefits to the effort we put in with the Troop. All the effort by everyone was supported and recognized by all. My son's growth wasn't in isolation. He saw the scouts ahead of him grow, he saw and helped his peers grow, and he led in the growth of the younger scouts. He saw the parents grow. He saw the results of our efforts in our growth. All of this in the context of a large extended family of former strangers. He saw the benefits of All In. He knows that we began All In to benefit him because we love him, but he saw all the immediate, personal, and extended benefits permeating all around all of us. This lesson, this example, is unmatched in my parenthood, and a level of success I could not have imagined.
So, yeah, I'm looking forward to seeing the parents, especially those with a new vacancy in the nest. As for the newer Scout Parents: "All in, baby, all in. The water's awesome."
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