vs UFV CW QF g1
Vamsi Nadella/UBC Thunderbirds
1
University of the Fraser Valley UFV 0-1,0-1
3
Winner University of British Columbia UBC 1-0,1-0
University of the Fraser Valley UFV
0-1,0-1
1
Final
3
University of British Columbia UBC
1-0,1-0
Winner
Set Scores
Team 1 2 3 4 F
University of the Fraser Valley UFV 22 25 17 16 (1)
University of British Columbia UBC 25 20 25 25 (3)

Game Recap: Women's Volleyball | | Jake McGrail (UBC Communications)

Thunderbirds hold serve in match one of Canada West QFs vs Cascades

VANCOUVER – The T-Birds certainly had to take a punch early in the first match of their best-of-three quarterfinal series, as they squeaked out a first set win and dropped the second against the visiting Cascades.
 
But following that, they grabbed the momentum midway through the third and never looked back from there, taking a four-set win in their playoff opener (25-22, 20-25, 25-17, 25-16).
 
"Through that third set I thought we started playing in a little better rhythm overall," said UBC head coach Doug Reimer, in reference to when the game flipped. "It's the age-old thing where I thought UFV were by and large doing a better job with serve and pass than we were but then we were able to counter with a good serving run that helped us become more engaged and focused. So, the combination of all of that but they have a lot of offensive weapons and when we're setting free balls over the net, they're too good a team to not take advantage."

vs UFV CW QF g1
 
Kylee Glanville and Lucy Borowski combined for 29 kills, 12 digs and five aces in a strong effort from UBC's top two outside hitters. Elizabeth Lee recorded nine kills and tied her season-high with 11 digs, while Issy Robertshaw tallied 29 assists, 10 digs and three blocks.
 
Lauren Attieh led the way for the Cascades with 17 kills and six digs, while Talia Attieh and Mandi Feist each had 11 kills of their own.
 
The two teams were nearly impossible to separate throughout the first set, with neither team leading by more than three points at any point in the frame. While the T-Birds kept their noses in front for bulk of the action, the Cascades refused to go away quietly as both teams traded powerful swings back-and-forth.

vs UFV CW QF g1
 
It was actually the road team that had a better hitting percentage (.444 vs .400), but the T-Birds had better volume with an incredible 18 kills led by Glanville with seven. Jocelyn Lenarcic and Borowski were the ones to land the final blows on the last two points to put the home team up in set count.
 
They were pegged back the following set, however, in a second that was much the same as the first until the Cascades ripped off a 9-3 run to take control after the score had been tied at 15 points apiece. The attacking duo of Lauren and Talia Attieh powered that burst with some timely kills, and they evened up the overall score with a 25-20 set win.

vs UFV CW QF g1
 
The Cascades continued to be on the front foot to begin the third, and held a slim lead up until 13-11. A UBC timeout was called to try and flip the momentum, and it certainly did get flipped, to the tune of a 10-1 run that put the home team back in the driver's seat.
 
The T-Birds cruised to the third set win from there, and were able to cruise for large portions of the fourth as well. A series of kills from Borowski and Glanville got their team off to a strong start in what turned out to be the final frame, as the Thunderbirds led by as many as 10 points before closing out the match at 25-16.

vs UFV CW QF g1
 
"We knew coming in that UFV has some veteran players and a year ago they were full value for first in the league," added Reimer. "They're always going to throw everything at you and I thought they came out and played really free and to a better degree than we did so credit to them. Tomorrow will be another battle and we have to be prepped; we've got two shots at it now and we need to win one of our next two matches."

vs UFV CW QF g1
 
The best-of-three Canada West quarterfinal resumes Friday evening with game two set for 5:30 p.m. PT. at War Memorial Gym. You can catch all the action on Canada West TV.
 
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