USA to Play for Paris Men’s Bronze After 5-Setter with Poland
PARIS, France, August 7, 2024.- The U.S. Men’s National Team will play
for the bronze medal at the Paris Olympics after falling to Poland, 3-2
(25-23, 25-27, 14-25, 25-23, 15-13) in the semifinals on Wednesday. The
U.S. (4-1) will meet the loser of the Italy-France match on Friday at 7
a.m. PT. Poland was playing in the semifinals after losing in the
quarterfinal round five consecutive times.
“One of the great challenges in this event is when you have hopes for
gold, but then you got to regroup mentally and go compete,” Head Coach
John Speraw said about being in the bronze medal match.
The U.S. led in kills (68-62) and were even in blocks (4-4). Poland held
a slight advantage in aces (6-4). The U.S. scored 32 points off opponent
error, while making 29 of its own.
Opposite Matt Anderson continued his incredible Olympics, leading all
players with 23 kills and added an ace to finish with 24 points. He hit
at a .459 efficiency percentage. Outside hitter Aaron Russell also
reached the 20-point plateau with 18 kills and two blocks, hitting .517
for the match. Anderson added eight digs and eight successful
receptions, while Russell led the team with 19 successful receptions and
recorded six digs.
Libero Erik Shoji played another outstanding match and recorded another
double-double with 13 successful receptions and a team-leading 10 digs.
“It’s physically and mentally exhausting,” Shoji said. “We have to come
back and play in two days. We want to be fighting for a gold and that
sucks, but bronze is important and we’re going to do everything we can
to win that one.”
Setter Micah Christenson directed the offense and added seven digs.
Wilfredo Leon of Poland led all players with 26 points on 22 kills, two
blocks and two huge aces.
Middle blocker Max Holt contributed 12 points on nine kills with a .750
hitting efficiency percentage without an error in 12 attacks. He also
recorded a block, two aces, and four kills. Outside hitter Thomas
Jaeschke came off the bench to score 10 points on nine kills and a
block. Middle blocker Taylor Averill finished with eight points on five
kills in seven attacks, two blocks and an ace.
Poland started fast by scoring five of the first seven points and led by
as many as four points on four occasions early in the set. Back-to-back
kills by Anderson brought the U.S. started a 5-1 U.S. run that tied the
set at 13. Poland responded with a 3-0 run and forced a U.S. timeout.
A third Poland block extended the lead back to four, 19-15. The U.S. was
unable to get closer than three points the rest of the set until
Anderson’s sixth kill closed the gap to 24-22 on the second set point by
Poland. After a hitting error, Poland recorded a kill on its fourth set
point. Anderson hit at a .556 clip in the set with six kills and one
error in eight attacks. Russell scored three points on a pair of kills
and a block.
The U.S. took its first lead of the second set on a Russell block to
make it 4-3. A Holt stuff block gave the U.S. its first two-point lead,
6-4. The teams traded the next 12 points before an Averill ace extended
the advantage to three points, 13-10 and led to a Poland timeout.
After a hitting error upped the lead to four, 18-14, Leon recorded
back-to-back kills to cut the deficit in half. Poland pulled within a
point, 21-20, on an ace. The U.S. came out of a timeout and regained the
two-point advantage as Russell scored his third point in a row for the
U.S. Garrett Muagututia served what the U.S. thought was an ace, which
it called for during the play, but upon review, it went off a Poland
player’s foot. Poland scored on the replay and scored on an overpass to
tie the set at 22.
The U.S. had a swing to take the second set at 24-23 but hit the ball
into the net. After Poland’s third consecutive service error, The U.S.
had another swing for the set but hit the ball out. Shoji perfectly
passed a great serve by Leon to set up an Anderson kill for the lead.
The U.S. converted its third set point when Anderson’s dig led to
Russell’s fourth kill. Russell finished the set with five points, adding
a block. Holt scored four points on three kills and a block, and
Anderson scored on all three of his attacks.
Averill earned a kill against a triple block and after Poland hit a ball
into the net, the U.S. went out in front 7-4 in the third set. After the
lead diminished to a point, a Holt ace and hitting error made it 10-7
and led Poland to take its first timeout. The teams traded the next four
points with Anderson recording two more kills. Jaeschke ended a long
rally to give the U.S. a four-point lead, 13-9. On the play, the Polish
libero Pawel Zatorski collided with setter Marcin Janusz and was on the
floor for three minutes before returning to play with an injured left
arm.
The U.S. scored the next three points after the delay to stretch the
lead to seven, 16-9. Anderson sandwiched a kill in between blocks by
Christenson and Averill. The lead grew to 10, 22-12 on a Russell kill
and a dig by Jaeschke that went over the net and just caught the back
line. Jaeschke gave the U.S. a 24-13 lead on a kill and a Russell tip
over the block in the middle gave the U.S. a 2-1 set lead. Jaeschke,
playing in his first set in the match, scored five points on four kills
and a block. Russell recorded five kills on six attacks and Anderson
scored three times on four attacks. The U.S. hit .600 in the set with 14
kills and only two errors in 20 total attacks.
Poland scored two of the first three points of the fourth set, but the
U.S. ran off the next to four points to force an early timeout. With the
score 3-2, Janusz was feeling the effects of his collision with his
libero and came off the court to get treatment on his back. Anderson
scored after Shoji made another incredible dig and then served an ace
for a 5-2 lead.
A Holt kill gave the U.S. its biggest lead, 9-5. An Anderson kill aided
by miscommunication on the Poland side made it 12-9, but Poland went on
a 4-1 run to tie the set at 13. The U.S. took two-point leads at 15-13
and 16-14 on Anderson kills, but Poland went ahead with a 3-0 run,
culminating with a block. Another block made it 18-17 Poland before the
U.S. went on its own 3-0 run. An Anderson kill tied the set and after a
hitting error, Holt recorded an ace for a 20-18 lead.
Poland fought back with a 6-2 run, earning its first set point on a Leon
ace. Russell scored to defend on set point, but Tomasz Fornal’s fourth
kill in five attacks sent the match to a fifth set. Anderson led all
players with nine points on eight kills and an ace. Russell recorded
four kills.
An Anderson kill started the fifth set, but it was the last U.S. lead of
the match. Poland scored the next three points on a kill, ace and block
to lead the U.S. to take an early time out. The U.S. appeared to tie the
set 4-4, but Poland successfully challenged a block touch for a 5-3
lead. A perfect pass by Shoji led to a Russell kill to cut the lead to
one, 6-5, but back-to-back points by Poland made it 8-5 with the side
switch.
A Russell kill on an overpass cut the deficit to one, 8-7, but
consecutive errors (service and net violation) restored Poland’s
three-point advantage. After a Poland service error, Holt served an ace
to cut the lead back to one point, 11-10, and lead to a Poland timeout.
A kill out of the middle kept Poland ahead and a block made it 13-10.
Leon’s 21st kill of the match gave Poland four match points. Jaeschke
and Anderson's kills extended the match and led to a Poland timeout. A
hitting error made it 14-13, but Poland sealed its trip to the gold
medal match on another kill by Leon. Holt led the U.S. with three points
on two kills and an ace |