Lady Buffs Volleyball Staying Home this Postseason

On Sunday, the NCAA announced the field for their 2015 women’s volleyball championships. The field of 64 included 32 automatic berths for conference championships and an equal number of at-large slots.

The Big 10 has bragging rights for the most number of teams (10) followed by 7 PAC-12 teams and 5 Big 12 teams. The top seeds were: No. 1 University of Southern California, No. 2 University of Minnesota, No. 3 University of Texas, and No. 4 University of Nebraska.

The announcement of the field took an unexpected turn for Colorado Buffs fans. The hometown team finished fifth in the PAC-12 with an 11-9 conference record and a 19-13 overall record. Despite their showing, the Lady Buffs were not invited to attend the Big Dance – yet invitations were extended to the 6th place Ducks (10-10 in conference and 16-13 overall), 7th place Wildcats (9-11 in conference and 19-13 overall) and 8th Sun Devils (8-12 in conference and 19-12 overall).

Here’s the way the conference season unfolded for CU:
• On a positive note, the Buffs swept Arizona, California, and Oregon State.
• The Buffs split matches with Arizona State, Oregon, Stanford, and Utah.
• The Buffs lost one match to Washington and defeated Washington State in one match.
• The Buffs were swept by USC and UCLA

The Buffs played 6 matches with a score of 3-2.
• They defeated Arizona State, Oregon, Oregon State, and Washington State.
• They lost to Oregon and USC.

In pre-conference play, the Buffs were 8-4. They were swept by Penn State (8th at the end of the season) and Illinois (21st at the end of the season). They dropped a 3-1 match at home to San Diego, who received votes in the final rankings. The Buffs other loss came at the hands of Rice, 3-1.

On a positive note, the Buffs had a 3-2 win over Florida State (ranked 19th at the end of the season). The other wins were against teams they shouldn’t have been playing:
• Oklahoma 12-16
• Sam Houston State, 14-18
• Louisiana-Lafayette, 6-23
• Montana State, 3-21
• Weber State, 6-22
• George Mason, 10-19
• Air Force, 12-21.
Combined these 7 teams were 63-140; they won 31.0% of their matches.

The Buffs had “good wins” against Stanford and FSU and at the end of the season they received votes for the top 25. A strong case can be made that the Lady Buffs were a legitimate top 32 team, i.e. they should have been invited to the Big Dance.

A strong case can be made that the Lady Buffs were a legitimate top 32 team, i.e. they should have been in the Big Dance.

If you consider the non-conference “bad losses” to Rice and San Diego and the conference losses to Oregon, Utah, and Arizona State, a strong case can be made that the Lady Buffs should stay at home.

The moral of the story is that competition against good teams and consistency matter!

Lady Buffs Sweep California
Lady Buffs sweep California.

 

NCAA Volleyball Quarterfinalists Represent 24 States and 5 Countries

The Big 12 and the PAC 12 conferences dominated the NCAA Women’s Volleyball Championships. Teams from their conferences filled 7 of the 8 quarterfinal slots. Texas was the only school from another conference.

This brief analysis identifies the home states of the most active players from the teams in the quarterfinals. Information was gathered from the rosters and stats pages of the school’s athletic department websites. Only players were included in this analysis that played more than half the sets during the season.

 Team  Number of Players Playing Playing More Than Half of the Sets in 2013  Number of Players Playing Sets in 2013 Season
Nebraska  9 15
Penn State  10 18
Purdue  11 13
Stanford  8 15
Texas 10 13
USC 11 15
Washington  9 12
Wisconsin  9 13
  Total  77  114

 

The following two tables identify the home countries and states for the quarterfinalists. The first table looks at the location by country and the second table identifies the home state for the U.S. players.

There were only 5 foreign players at four schools. Four of the quarterfinalists had all players from the U.S.

NU

PSU

Purdue

Stanford

Texas

USC

U of W

Wisconsin

Total

Italy

1

1

Mexico

1

1

PuertoRico

1

1

2

Sweden

1

1

U.S.

8

9

11

8

10

9

8

9

72

 Total

9

10

11

8

10

11

9

9

77

 

The rosters of most teams included players from within their regions. For example Purdue has 6 players from Indiana and USC had five players from California.

Of the 72 players from the U.S., 15 were from California, 11 from Texas, 9 from Illinois and 7 from Indiana.

Five of the 8 schools have players from California, 6 schools have players from Texas, and 4 schools have players from Illinois.

Although about 60% of the players are from 4 states, the key players from the quarterfinalists were from 24 states.

 

NU

PSU

Purdue

Stanford

Texas

USC

U of W

Wisconsin

Total

 AL    

1

         

1

 AR

1

1

CA

1

1

4

5

4

15

 CO

1

1

 FL

1

1

 HI

2

2

 IA

1

1

 IL

2

2

1

4

9

 IN

6

1

7

 KY

1

1

 LA

1

1

 MD

1

1

 MI

1

1

 MN

2

2

 MO

1

1

 NB

2

2

 NC

1

1

1

3

 NJ

1

1

 NY

1

1

 OH

2

1

3

 OK

1

1

2

 OR

2

2

 TX

1

1

1

5

2

1

11

 WA        

1

1

 

2

 TOTAL

8

9

11

8

10

9

8

9

72

 

The data illustrates that quality programs are developing high performance players in most parts of the country.