#TBT: Leland's Glass Continues to Shine
By
Geoff Kimmerly
MHSAA.com senior editor
April 17, 2014
Alisha Glass’ 48 kills in the 2006 MHSAA Class D Volleyball Final remain the championship match standard, especially impressive considering who Leland beat and how the Comets won that day.
And her legendary status has continued to grow with successes at the collegiate and now national team levels as well.
Less than a decade after graduating with the most kills, blocks and aces in national high school history, Glass has emerged as one of the top setters in the United States – and a candidate to set the U.S. Olympic team in 2016 after being selected to the team as an alternate two years ago.
Glass was named USA Volleyball Indoor Female Athlete of the Year at the end of 2013 after leading the U.S. team to gold medals at the 2013 NORCECA Continental Championship in Nebraska and Pan American Cup in Peru. She averaged 10.22 assists per set and started 28 of 31 matches for the U.S. team last year. (Click for Glass' USA Volleyball bio.)
As a 6-foot hitter and the daughter of Leland coach Laurie Glass, Alisha helped the Comets reach the 2005 Class D Final before they fell to St. Philip 25-19, 25-19, 25-14. A year later, Glass had 48 of her team’s 69 kills, five of the Comets’ eight aces and a team-high 27 digs as Leland overcame the Tigers in five games after dropping the first two – 21-25, 20-25, 25-19, 25-23 and 15-9.
St. Philip has won all eight Class D championships since falling that morning at Western Michigan University.
After finishing at Leland, Glass started all four of her seasons at Penn State and set the Nittany Lions to three straight NCAA championships.
Although her MHSAA career blocks record has been broken, the career kills and aces records still stand in Michigan and nationally.
Glass returned to Leland in the fall for the retirement of her jersey. Below is video from that event courtesy of WPBN in Traverse City.
PHOTO: (Top) Leland’s Alisha Glass (left) celebrates with a teammate during the 2005 Class D Final.
Kestrels Prove to be Champions Again
November 17, 2012
By Geoff Kimmerly
Second Half editor
BATTLE CREEK – Taylor Vuich and her teammates have learned to ride the wave of a good omen.
And so, when her hotel room was the first among Monroe St. Mary Catholic Central’s to wake up Saturday morning, and their favorite song was playing when they flipped on the radio, the Kestrels just knew “today was the day.”
Saturday was the day St. Mary got back the MHSAA Class C championship after coming within three points of a second-straight title one year ago.
The Kestrels claimed their second championship in three seasons and fourth overall with a 25-14, 24-26, 25-10 and 25-9 win over first-time finalist Traverse City St. Francis at Kellogg Arena.
“We got all the way here last year, (played) two and half hours, and then it just slipped away from us,” Vuich said. “They were a great team, but I think we knew this year that this is what we wanted. We wanted to prove to everyone that we’re state champions.”
It’s fair to call the 2011 Class C Final epic. All five games were decided by three or fewer points, with Morley-Stanwood claiming the last 15-12.
With now five championship game appearances over the last 11 seasons, it’s also fair to say the Kestrels (49-6) set high expectations heading into every fall – even if that might’ve turned a little dangerous earlier this week.
“When we talk about goals at the beginning of the year, they talk about getting back here,” St. Mary coach Diane Tuller said of her players. “I talk about the first game of the season, (that) this is where we want to be midway and this is where we want to be toward the end; this is what we need to keep working on. That’s the important thing to me. They set those goals, and I have to keep bringing them back.
“I think we overlooked the team we played in the Quarterfinals (Auburn Hills Oakland Christian). It was our worst game of the year. Everything shut down. … (But) our senior captains really wanted it, and they kept them focused. I gave them the job of keeping this team together.”
And they got back together quickly after the Gladiators took a close second set.
St. Mary scored the first 10 points of the third game and then jumped out to a 10-1 lead in the fourth.
And when junior McKenzie Todd and sophomore Cassandra Haut combined to simultaneously crush the winning point straight into the floor, it was a strong lasting impression of how those last two games had gone.
Haut, an all-state honorable mention as a freshman, finished with a team-high 16 kills from her powerful right arm. Vuich, swinging a hammer with her left, added 13 kills and eight digs, and Todd had 10 kills.
Senior Claire McMillan had 46 assists, tied for ninth-most in a Final since the beginning of the rally scoring era in 2004-05. Junior Kelsey Geiman – beating the previous record by five (and the record from before rally scoring by seven).
"We are really deep, in all our players. We have a lot of good hitters on our team,” Haut said. “We can always count on anyone on our team.”
St. Francis finished 42-8-3, impressive all the more because co-coaches Heather Simpson and Rita Jones didn't take over until a month before practice began.
They moved up from coaching the junior varsity after the former varsity coach resigned to take another full-time job.
“Our kids don’t quit, and I don’t think how we played today is really a reflection of how good we were, or are,” Simpson said. “From that aspect, it’s disappointing. But hats off to them. They’re a good team, and we are too, but we couldn't match them.”
St. Francis senior Bridget Bussell just missed getting into the Finals records as well, with her 18 kills just two short of that list. She also had six digs, and senior setter Katilyn Hegawald had seven and 26 assists.
“We just never got into our groove, except for the game we won,” Bussell said.
(But) we knew we were here for a reason, so we tried as hard as we could to keep pushing.”
PHOTOS: (Top) Monroe St. Mary sophomore Cassandra Haut (13) covers a kill attempt by Traverse City St. Francis during the Class C Final. (Middle) St. Francis senior Kaitlyn Hegawald (9) prepares to set up teammate Olivia Hardy (4).