The University of the Fraser Valley men's volleyball team managed a massive comeback on Saturday evening, battling back from a two-set deficit to edge the Columbia Bible College Bearcats in five.
The Cascades, coming offÂ
a three-set triumph over the Bearcats at home on Friday, struggled early in the rematch at Columbia Place, dropping the first two sets by scores of 25-21 and 30-28. But they clawed their way back into it, winning the next three 25-21, 27-25 and 16-14 to seal the weekend sweep.
"They showed some grit, they showed some heart," UFV head coach
Nathan Bennett said of his players afterward. "That was something they struggled with in the first two sets – they didn't look overly engaged. But they turned it around, which does show character. That's a nice win for how we played. We battled hard, and it wasn't easy. We'll take the two points."
The Bearcats, energized by their home crowd, won the first set and seized full control of the match by outlasting the Cascades in an epic second set. Facing a 24-22 deficit, UFV staved off two set points on kills by
Jackson Obst and
Caleb Kastelein. CBC, though, managed to survive a trio of subsequent set points for UFV and eventually earned the 30-28 triumph.
The Cascades stuck with it, and pulled out a win in the third set behind a pair of clutch aces from
Ian Jagersma in the late going.Â
The fourth went down to the wire, but
Landon Uy came up huge for UFV, hammering down four kills in the late stages to seal a 27-25 win and send the match to a fifth set.
The Cascades built a 9-6 lead in the fifth, only to watch the Bearcats reel off four straight points for a 10-9 advantage. UFV again dug deep, with key offensive plays from Uy, Obst and Kastelein, and
Justin Peleshytyk would eventually close out the match with an ace.
"The start was tough, but when things don't come easy, we have to learn how to find rhythm," Bennett said. "That starts with breathing, understanding your job, and making sure you're executing it.Â
"When the frustration climbs like it was in the first two sets, we started doing things out of character. But in the last two sets specifically, I thought we calmed our breath and we were doing our jobs and executing at a higher level."
The Cascades volleyball teams are back in action on the road next weekend, facing the Vancouver Island University Mariners in a Friday-Saturday set.
Â