Dalhausser and Lucena still impressing at 40
LONG BEACH, California, USA, August 8, 2020 - The question said
it all.
It said more than Phil Dalhausser and Nick Lucena’s two
consecutive wins at the AVP Champions Cup in Long Beach,
California. More than the fact that, at the time the question
was asked, Dalhausser and Lucena had lost just two sets in 11
matches in three weeks. It said more than Dalhausser’s 25 aces
in those 11 matches, or his 53 blocks, or Lucena’s 137 digs –
all of which were leading the AVP in their respective categories
in the three-week-long series of a season.
After Jake Gibb and Taylor Crabb topped Casey Patterson and Theo
Brunner in the quarterfinals, setting up another meeting with
Dalhausser and Lucena in the semifinals of the Porsche Cup, Dain
Blanton wondered if this was the best volleyball Dalhausser, at
40 years old, had ever played.
It was a simple, innocuous question, yet it said virtually
everything you’d need to know about the state of American beach
volleyball.
There might be some new kids on the block – Taylor and Trevor
Crabb and Tri Bourne prime among them – but Dalhausser and
Lucena, no matter their age – they are both 40 – no matter their
number of children, or the fact that neither live in California,
still reign supreme.
Gibb laughed when asked if this was the best he’s ever seen
Dalhausser play. Gibb has seen Dalhausser at every stage of the
2.06m blocker’s career. They were regularly mistaken for one
another in the early 2000s, when Gibb and Dalhausser, both tall
and lanky, with heads full of hair, made their debuts as the
next big blockers in the U.S.
“People were asking if I saw my lookalike,” Gibb said, recalling
the first time they played one another, in Austin, Texas, in
2004. “I’ve been dealing with that for 15 years.”
For 15 years, he has competed with Dalhausser for the title of
best American blocker. He paused before answering Blanton’s
question, his mind perhaps wading through those 15 years and 100
Dalhausser victories, wondering if this 2020 version of the Thin
Beast really is the best of them all.
Nah. Gibb couldn’t take the bait.
Couldn’t look past 2008-2010, when Dalhausser and Todd Rogers
went on a run that many thought might never happen again, until
some Norwegian kids named Anders Mol and Christian Sorum did
something remarkably similar the past three seasons.
In that three-year stretch, Dalhausser and Rogers won 15 of 25
FIVBs and 20 of 36 AVPs. Dalhausser was named the best offensive
player and best hitter on the FIVB all three years, the best
blocker and best setter in two, the team of the year in 2010. He
won an Olympic gold medal in 2008 and most outstanding player on
the planet in 2010.
“He’s playing great,” Gibb said. “It’s hard to argue from 08, 09
season. That Phil was, in my opinion, the best volleyball I’ve
ever seen in my life, the most dominant I’ve ever seen in my
life. He’s not far away from that now. He’s playing really,
really well.”
It’s not just Dalhausser, either. Their dominance in Long Beach
was every bit thanks to Lucena, too. Bourne, who lost two
straight weeks to Lucena and Dalhausser in the Monster Hydro Cup
and the Wilson Cup but avenged them with a win in the finals of
the Porsche Cup, said it’s some of the best volleyball he’s seen
Lucena play.
“It’s so confusing,” Bourne said. “The old guys are the ones who
are supposed to be struggling. Nick comes out in the best shape
of his life. Phil turns the clock back 10 years. What is going
on here?” |