JULY 28, 2024:

Extended version:

PARIS (AP) — A South Dakota native, Taryn Kloth had never even played beach volleyball until after she graduated from Creighton as a star in the indoor version of the sport. In pursuit of a business degree, she landed at LSU without any beach skills at all.

“I actually got dismantled. I was horrible. I couldn’t even talk and walk in the sand at the same time,” she said. “I just remember going home and calling my parents and I’m like: ‘Oh, my gosh. They should probably kick me off the team.’”

Unlike the generations of Californians who grew up playing volleyball on the local beaches as kids, Kloth and teammate Kristen Nuss came to the sandy side of the sport late. After teaming up at LSU, they stayed in Louisiana, training in Nuss’ hometown of New Orleans.

And when the world’s second-ranked team made its debut with a 21-17, 21-14 victory over Canada at Eiffel Tower Stadium in Paris on Saturday night, it was the first American beach volleyball pair ever to go for Olympic gold without any connection to the Golden State.

“We kind of said we wanted to rewrite the script, and kind of change that,” Nuss said in a recent phone interview before the pair departed for Paris. “You had to move out to California. You had to live in California to make it into something in this sport. And I feel like we really done a good job of kind of changing that.”

The West Coast has the sunshine

Beach volleyball was made for — and made in — California, with its miles of sandy shoreline and weather that allows athletes to play year-round.

The two-person game was invented there, and it has thrived on beaches where volleyball nets welcome professionals and recreational players alike. The Volleyball Walk of Fame on the Manhattan Beach Pier commemorates the winners of the annual tournament there — one of the sport’s most prestigious.

And since the NCAA first sanctioned beach volleyball in 2016, California schools — UCLA and Southern California, to be precise — have won every national championship.

“When people say California is the hotbed of the sport, it really is,” Nuss said. “People grow up going to the beach, playing the sport. People love it there.

“Louisiana was definitely not the hotbed of beach volleyball when I was growing up,” said Nuss, who started playing beach volleyball as a sophomore in high school. “We would almost have to beg other junior teams to play in tournaments, so we could just have a juniors tournament.”

They knock me out when I’m down there

Kloth played indoor volleyball at Creighton in Omaha, Nebraska — another distinctively nonbeach town — and arrived at LSU ready to, and needing to, learn. Her only experience with the beach game was hitting the ball around with friends at a lake back in South Dakota.

“I wouldn’t even call it a beach. I would call it dirt,” she said. “It was like concrete with a little bit of dust on the top of it, and we would just play indoor volleyball outside.”

(Beach volleyball is a totally different sport than the indoor game, with two players on a team instead of six. But the biggest change is going from the hardwood to the flexible surface, which makes running and jumping — any sudden movement, really — a new challenge.)

“When I came on my visit, I didn’t even know where LSU was. I thought it was in New Orleans. I show up in January and what happens a month later? Mardi Gras,” Kloth said. “Yeah, I was already thrown into, like, the most Louisiana time ever.”

Kloth managed to master the beach game quickly enough so that by her first full season at LSU, 2020, she went 27-0 with two different partners. In her second year, she and Nuss teamed up to go 36-0 – including a pair of doubleheader victories over UCLA and top-ranked USC.

And by the time she had her degree, Kloth also had acquired enough of a support system to want to stay.

“I was just thrown into this very different culture,” she said. “And they were just very gracious in welcoming me and knowing that I did not have a family here like everybody else probably did.”

By a palm tree in the sand

So when the time came to move out to California — like every other would-be beach volleyball Olympian the United States has ever produced — they didn’t.

Training in New Orleans meant they wouldn’t be surrounded by the best competition and all of the resources that California could offer. But Kloth didn’t need her MBA to know that it would also be cheaper — an important factor for two people starting out in a sport that can be a tough living.

In Louisiana, though, they had a place to stay and a gym; their coach was local, too.

“For us, our coach was here. We had a place to stay. We had our gym. And I think, for sure, the cost of living was definitely something that steered us away,” Nuss said. “Because it was like: ‘Why? Why would we go pay a large sum of money when we can just stay here?’”

I’ve been all around this great big world

The Americans have dominated Olympic beach volleyball — especially on the women’s side, with Misty May-Treanor and Kerri Walsh Jennings winning three straight gold medals from 2004-12 and April Ross and Alix Klineman winning it all in Tokyo three years ago.

Their resumes read like a California atlas: Long Beach, USC, Stanford.

In fact, all 32 pairs the U.S. previously sent to the Summer Games has had some connection to the Golden State.

Nuss and Kloth are hoping to start a new trend.

“They obviously have a great support system where they’re at. And they felt like there’s no need to come to California,” Walsh Jennings, who is in Paris as an analyst, said Friday. “They knew what they wanted and they just went with it.

“When you’re working to become the best in the world, to do it your way, and to do it in a way that is going to serve you and your team best, sometimes people question your judgment. But ultimately it’s your call,” the five-time Olympian said. “And they made the adult and awesome call for themselves.”

 

DECEMBER 26, 2018:

(SD Sportswriters Association)- The long National Football League career of Rapid City native Adam Vinatieri has once again earned the South Dakota State graduate the honor of being named South Dakota’s Sports Celebrity of the Year. The honor is one of several year-end recognitions chosen by the South Dakota Sportswriters Association– including two from Pierre and one from Chamberlain.

Vinatieri has won two Super Bowls with game-winning kicks and has 46 field goals over 50 yards. But it was a chip shot that put him in the National Football League’s record books. Vinatieri’s 25-yarder at the end of the second quarter in Indianapolis’ 42-28 victory over the Oakland Raiders on Oct. 28 will surely be one he never forgets. With that kick, Vinatieri passed Hall of Famer Morten Andersen to become the NFL’s all-time leading scorer. He added three extra points in the fourth quarter that give him 2,560 for his career — six more than Andersen. He has 2,589 points heading into the final game of the regular season. Vinatieri kicked for Rapid City Central and then went to South Dakota State before going to NFL Europe, and then starting his NFL career, first with the New England Patriots and now with the Colts. It is the third time in his career that Vinatieri has been honored by the SDSWA, which has voted on statewide honors since 1958. He previously was honored in 1997 and 2002, and joins Becky Hammon (2005, 2014, 2015), Chad Greenway (2009, 201, 2016) and Mike Miller (1998, 2000 with Josh Heupel, 2012) as three-time winners. Longtime Major League Baseball manager Sparky Anderson is the only four-time winner of the honor (1970, 1975, 1984, 1993) in the celebrity category.

Honorees are chosen in several different categories, including college, prep and independent (not college or prep), with honors going to athletes, coaches and teams. Here are the other honorees:

Independent Male Athlete–Peyton Zabel, Pierre

While the Pierre standout was a force in both football and basketball during his senior season — winning Player of the Year honors in both — he was nearly untouchable when he was on the mound. The hard-throwing right-handed pitcher notched 79 strikeouts during the spring, including a 16-strikeout performance in the state semifinals. Taken in the 19th round of the Major League Baseball Amateur Draft by the Milwaukee Brewers, Zabel opted to go to college instead. He is competing in both football and baseball at Augustana University.

Prep Boys Coach– Shawn Lewis, Pierre Wrestling

The Pierre Governors continued their reign of Class A wrestling under Lewis in 2018, winning their seventh title in eight seasons. Under Lewis, who started with the program as an assistant in 2012-13 and took over in 2013, the Governors qualified 12 wrestlers for state, placing 10 including two state champions, William Turman and Michael Lusk. Lewis credits all this success to the youth wrestling program in Pierre that teaches the kids the basic skills they need to succeed once they get to high school.

Prep Male Athlete– Nash Hutmacher, Chamberlain

For the second straight season, Hutmacher went undefeated at 285 pounds in Class A wrestling with a 46-0 record, highlighted by a highly anticipated, title-match victory over Nick Casperson, of Beresford/Alcester-Hudson, to cap his sophomore season. Through mid-December, Hutmacher had won more than 95 consecutive high school matches for the Cubs. Hutmacher was also named to the Class 11B all-state football team for a second year in a row, and Hutmacher took third at the national freestyle wrestling championships in Fargo. The 6-foot-5, 305-pound Hutmacher — who is set to graduate in 2020 — totaled 105 tackles, 10 sacks and 10 forced fumbles during the football season.

Independent Female Athlete– Taryn Kloth, Sioux Falls

A Sioux Falls O’Gorman graduate, Kloth closed out her senior season at Creighton in style, picking up honorable mention All-America honors as she led the Bluejays back to the NCAA Tournament. The outside hitter led Creighton with 4.15 kills per set and also ranked among the Big East leaders by hitting .283. Her 490 kills are the most in school history by a senior, while her 1,427 career terminations are fourth-most in CU history. With her Bluejays career now over, Kloth plans to play beach volleyball at LSU.

Independent Team– Canova Gang Amateur Baseball

Representing the small town in Miner County, the Gang (21-5) claimed its first Class B state championship since 2009 and its fifth championship overall with a 10-2 win over Cornbelt League rival Flandreau on Aug. 12. Canova’s offense produced 58 runs and recorded 10 or more runs four times during the 12-day tournament at Augustana University’s Ronken field. Canova pitcher Trey Krier was the MVP of the tournament. He finished the tournament allowing two earned runs over 19 innings (0.95 ERA) and striking out 11 batters. He also went 6-for-14 (.429) at the plate with five RBIs. Justin Miller and Garrett Gassman also made the Class B all-tournament team.

College Male Athlete– Seth Gross, SDSU Wrestling

The junior in 2018 became the first Jackrabbit in the Division I era in any sport to win a national championship, placing first at 133 pounds at the NCAA Wrestling Championships. Gross posted a 29-1 record. He earned bonus points in 24 of his 29 wins, including 12 pins, seven technical falls and five major decisions. The top seed won one match by fall and two each by major decision and decision at nationals. He defeated No. 2 Stevan Micic of Michigan 13-8 in the final. Gross’ lone loss came when he moved up to 141 pounds and fell 4-2 to top-ranked Bryce Meredith of Wyoming in a dual. SDSU finished 12th in the team standings at nationals. The Jackrabbits went 14-2 in duals, including an 8-0 mark in the Big 12 Conference.

College Men’s Coach– Paul Sather, NSU Basketball

Paul Sather did something no coach has ever done in South Dakota. The Northern State men’s basketball team won more games in the 2018-19 season than any college men’s team in the state ever had. The Wolves came one basket from winning the school’s first NCAA team championship, and on the way they won a school-record tying 18 consecutive victories. The team had star-caliber players across the board, but each one was bought in 100 percent to Sather’s concept of a team, something he learned and developed from former Wolves coaches Don Meyer and Bob Olson. Any one player could’ve been among the best players on another region team, but each one sacrificed self and stats for wins. It worked.

College Men’s Team– Augustana Baseball

The Vikings started strong and kept it up all season long, boasting a preposterously deep and talented pitching staff and pairing it with a powerful and speedy lineup that vaulted them to the No. 1 ranking for the first time in program history near the end of the regular season. The NSIC champions advanced through regionals to make it to the D-II World Series, then won four straight games in the finals to become the northernmost team ever to win a D-II baseball championship. Ace pitchers Jacob Blank (who was later drafted by the Twins) and Tyler Mitzel led the way, with Blank going the distance in the title game against Columbus State, striking out 12 batters in the 3-2 win, which included whiffing the side in order in the 9th inning.

College Female Athlete– Macy Miller, SDSU Basketball

The junior in 2017-18 returned from a torn ACL the prior season to earn Summit League Player of the Year honors and lead the Jackrabbits to the Summit League Women’s Basketball Championship title. Miller averaged 18.3 points, 5.8 rebounds, 3.2 assists and 1.1 steals per game. She shot 50.3 percent from the field and 45.1 percent from 3-point range. SDSU beat South Dakota 65-50 in the Summit League final – avenging a pair of regular-season losses – and Miller was named Tournament MVP. The Jackrabbits went 26-7 and earned a No. 8 seed in the NCAA Tournament, falling 81-74 in overtime to ninth-seeded Villanova. Miller was the 2018-19 Summit League Preseason Player of the Year and again leads SDSU in scoring this season.

College Women’s Coach– Jason Christensen, DWU Basketball

Christensen’s eighth season at the helm of Dakota Wesleyan was his best yet, leading the Tigers to 32 wins and the school’s first national championship in any team sport. Christensen is already the school’s winningest coach in women’s basketball program history and in 2017-18, tied a single-season record for wins in DWU history. Averaging a school record 80.4 points per game, the Tigers led the nation in free-throw percentage, were second in field goal percentage (48.2) and ranked third in the country in rebounding margin, out-rebounding teams by 11.9 rebounds per game for the season. The national championship earned Christensen, a native of Mitchell, NAIA national coach of the year honors.

College Women’s Team– DWU Basketball

Using a brand of tough and defensive-minded play, the Tigers claimed the NAIA Division II women’s basketball championship game in March, winning five games in six days — each by double-digits — and finishing a 32-6 record. In an all-Great Plains Conference Championship game, the 82-59 victory over second-ranked Concordia (Neb.) in the title game March 13 provided the ultimate revenge, as the Bulldogs had won the three earlier matchups during the season. DWU drained 15 3-pointers in the championship and led by as many as 30 points, finishing with the largest margin of victory in an NAIA Division II women’s title game in 17 years. Led by coach Jason Christensen, the Tigers also beat No. 1 seeds in the quarterfinal, semifinal and championship games. Alexandria native Kynedi Cheeseman was named the tournament’s MVP. Senior Ashley Bray was named an NAIA Division II women’s basketball first-team All-American, while twin sister Amber Bray was named to the honorable mention list. Rylie Osthus, a 5-foor-9 junior point guard from De Smet, averaged 10.2 points, 5.4 assists, 4.6 rebounds and 1.4 steals per game for the Tigers.

Prep Boys Team– Colome Football

Finishing the season as the only undefeated team in South Dakota, Colome won a wild Class 9B championship game over Sully Buttes, emerging victorious 48-42 in overtime in the DakotaDome on Nov. 9. Led by second-year head coach Ben Connot, the Cowboys had four all-state selections, led by quarterback Jackson Kinzer, who accounted for more than 2,800 yards of total offense and 46 touchdowns. Beau Bertram, Chase Dufek and Layton Thieman were also selected to the Class 9B all-state squad. In the state championship, a touchdown by Dufek in the first possession of overtime put the Cowboys up by six points, and Jaikob Week’s interception on fourth down on defense preserved the win, which is Colome’s fourth state championship in school history and the second in the last three years.

Prep Female Athlete– Paiton Burckhard, Aberdeen

Paiton Burckhard closed out her stellar prep career with a fistful of accolades after leading Aberdeen Central to its second Class AA girls basketball state championship in three years. Now a contributing member of the South Dakota State women’s basketball program, Burckhard was named South Dakota Miss Basketball, Gatorade Player of the Year, Spirit of Su award winner and earned her second straight South Dakota Basketball Class AA Player of the Year. She leaves Aberdeen Central as the school’s all-time leader in both points (1706) and rebounds (886). In addition to her exploits on the basketball court, Burckhard was the Class AA state champion in the girls shot put. She also holds the Aberdeen Central school record in that event.

Prep Girls Coach– Darci Wassenaar, S.F. Christian Volleyball

Darci Wassenaar added another state volleyball title to the Sioux Falls Christian dynasty in 2018. The Chargers were barely challenged all weekend and capped off a perfect tournament by not dropping a set, overwhelming top-seeded Miller in the championship game, 25-17, 25-14, 25-12. It’s the eighth title in 12 years for the Chargers, all under head coach Darci Wassenaar. Of all their championship runs, this one ranks up there as one of the most dominating performances.

Prep Girls Team– St. Thomas More Basketball

As the clock counted down in the 2018 Class A girls’ basketball state championship game in Watertown, the St. Thomas More student section couldn’t help but put its own twist as the seconds ticked away. Once the clock hit five seconds the fans started to chant “FIVE, FIVE, FIVE,” as in, the amount of consecutive state titles the Cavaliers had earned. STM held off a game Madison squad 54-41 to win its fifth straight state title and the sixth in the last seven years. It wasn’t always easy for the 24-4 Cavaliers, who combined to go 91-5 in the previous four title seasons. But that is what St. Thomas More coach Brandon Kandolin said also has made this team special. “I think where it’s different is we were faced with some adversity,” Kandolin said. “We took a couple of losses (throughout the season) that we knew we probably should have won, and I think it exposed some things for us that we needed to work on.”



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