Cuba to face off Dominican Republic in Gold Medal Match
XALAPA, Mexico, September 7, 2024.- Cuba won
their semifinal in five sets 3-2 (18-25, 25-22, 25-19, 25-19, 22-25,
16-14) against Mexico and will face the Dominican Republic on Sunday in
the gold medal match of the U23 Women's Pan American Cup at the Xalapa
International Velodrome in Veracruz.
This is the first time in the history of the U23 Women's Pan American
Cup that Cuba has reached the gold medal match. The Caribbean team has
only won three bronze medals (2014, 2016, 2018).
Cuba prevailed in overtime with advantage in blocking (16-13) and
scoring on 44 Mexican errors against 31. Mexico dominated in kills
(54-41) and serves(7-5).
Cuban opposite hitter, Lisania Grafort, led all scorers with 22 points
(18 kills, 2 blocks, 2 aces). Cuba's captain, Whitney James, contributed
12 points (9 kills, 2 blocks, one ace). Middle blocker Yensy Kindelan
scored a match-high of 5 blocks from her 8 points.
Four Mexican players scored in double digits: Michelle Lizárraga (18),
María Cruz (16), Marcela Herrera (15), and Arleth Márquez (14).
Mexico controlled the first set with Michelle Lizárraga joined by María
Cruz in the attack, topping with 7 blocks. Cuba tied the match winning a
tight second set, reaching 22 points each and scoring the last three
points with a kill by Lisania Grafort, Yensy Kindelan blocking Marcela
Herrera, and a Mexican error. Cuba dominated the third set from start to
finish, capitalizing on Mexico's errors and leading in blocking 5 to 2,
with Grafort as their best player. Mexico came back stronger in the
fourth set, jumping to a comfortable six-point lead (15-9) pushed by
from Cruz, Herrera, and Arleth Márquez joining in to force the fifth
set. The tiebreaker was a party of points, which Cuba won after losing a
match point; with a kill from Grafort, Cuba reached the second match
point, and Yalain De La Peña sealed the victory with another kill.
Leivis García, Head coach of Cuba:
“We have improved in game organization and made progress from a mental
perspective. Despite having a good physical condition, we needed the
players to feel powerful during the game, to believe in themselves, and
we have worked to bring them to that point. They were motivated against
an opponent that deserves respect, the host of the tournament, with
athletes of a very high level of play and good tactics, but today the
Cubans showed their courage”.
Michelle Lizárraga, Mexico's top scorer:
“We got overconfident and relaxed because we started very well. We gave
everything for Mexico, we fought, but the result didn't go our way. In
the end, we pushed hard and recovered after losing two sets”. |