MOREHEAD, Ky. -- Leah Meffert picked a
great time for a great performance.
Meffert, an all-OVC senior, slammed home 30 kills to lead
sixth-seeded Tennessee Tech to a dramatic, come-from-behind 3-2
victory over No. 3 Jacksonville State Thursday in the opening round
of the Ohio Valley Conference volleyball tournament at Morehead
State.
The Golden Eagles, who swept all three matches from the Gamecocks
this season, battled back after falling behind 2-1 through the
first three sets of an extremely even contest.
Tech moves into the semifinals of the OVC Tournament Friday, where
the Golden Eagles will meet No. 2 seed Austin Peay at 3:30 p.m. CT.
Fans can hear the live broadcast on the Golden Eagle Sports Network
via the telephone or Internet.
"This was a hard-fought win," head coach John Blair said.
"Jacksonville State is the kind of team where no lead is ever safe.
It was really a battle of wills and we ended up winning that
battle."
"We played really clean in the fourth and fifth sets and forced
Jacksonville State into some uncharacteristic errors," Blair said.
"We didn't do anything overly spectacular."
Blair pointed to two of his seniors for their work at the net.
Meffert hit .373 percent and posted a season-high 30 kills despite
battling the flu the past three days. She took 67 swings and made
just five hitting errors. Marie Pedicord had 11 kills while hitting
.286.
"We got a really good match out of both Leah and Marie," Blair
said. "Those are two seniors playing the way they would like to go
out."
Meffert was out of practice Tuesday and Wednesday with the flu, and
was weak earlier in the day Thursday before finding the strength to
shine against the Gamecocks.
"Leah was weak today but when it was time to play, she was just
ready to play," Blair said.
The veteran coach, who has his team in the OVC Tournament for the
fourth consecutive year, gave credit to senior setter Melanie Culp and the
team's overall balance Thursday. Culp had 47 assists while adding
five digs and two blocks.
"We got a nice, consistent setting performance from Melanie Culp,"
Blair said. "She played within her abilities and that's what we
need. Just solid, consistent play from her and we got that.
"You don't win these kind of matches at these kind of events
without every single person who played doing something," he added.
"It just doesn't work. That's a really positive thing today.
Everybody who was in there did something for us to be successful.
It will take that same kind of effort plus tomorrow to advance to
the finals."
Freshman Natalie Penrod provided eight kills and seven digs while
Kelsey Gray had
seven kills and five total blocks. Freshman Allison May led in the
back row with 17 digs while Madison Comperry added
10 digs.
JSU had three players reach double figures in digs, topped by
Caitlin Vorbeck wth 20. Kara Slater added 16 kills and Jen Meyer
had 14. Lauren Harkins had 21 digs for the Gamecocks.
The Gamecocks hit .400 in the first set on the way to a 25-19
victory, but that mark dropped to .057 in the second set as Tech
tied things with a 25-20 victory. A very close third set went to
JSU, 25-20. The Gamecocks hit .471 while Tech managed a .382
hitting mark in the middle set.
The Golden Eagle outlasted JSU 25-21, in the fourth set then took
control in the fifth with a commanding 13-8 lead. The Gamecocks
rallied to make it 14-10 before Meffert's 30th kill of the night
put it in the books. Tech stayed nearly error-free, hitting .350 in
the fifth set with eight kills and just one error in 20
attempts.