Life’s quite a beach for Quinn
Richard Dunn
SEAL BEACH - With the European professional volleyball season over,
Newport Beach’s Leland Quinn is back on local sand, but the neighborhood
isn’t quite what it used to be.
After a one-year hiatus, the Association of Volleyball Professionals
Tour will return to Seal Beach Aug. 18-20 for the Paul Mitchell AVP U.S.
Open.
Quinn, among the area products expected to compete with beach
volleyball’s best athletes for the $75,000 purse at Seal Beach, lives
most of the year in Europe, where last season he played in Spain.
While in the midst of a 3 1/2-month spin on the AVP Tour, Quinn has
recovered nicely from a knee injury, suffered when he sprinted to a ball
and crashed into an advertisement sign.
“The doctor said no operation (was necessary), to just stay off it and
rehab it, but it was scary,†said Quinn, who regularly sees Corona del
Mar chiropractor Dr. Jake Pivaroff for most of his aches and pains.
“When I get back to Europe, it’s six days a week, six hours a day, and
your body’s torn up. Sports medicine isn’t the same out there as it is
here, and (Pivaroff) has helped me out a lot.â€
Quinn, 28, is playing his sixth year on the AVP Tour, which he said is
changing. The tour once had a contract with NBC and was televised
nationally every weekend with skyrocketing purses in six figures.
But, today, Quinn said organizers are “thinking about turning it into
a pro wrestling thing. They want (players) more animated, like a bunch of
arrogant athletes.â€
Quinn, ranked No. 44 on the AVP Tour with $1,625 in earnings this
year, wore Leopard skin Speedo shorts for the last 10 minutes of a match
against No. 9 Mike Whitmarsh and David Swatik. Quinn and partner Pepe
Delahoz lost the match in the season’s second event at Santa Cruz, but it
was at least a memorable 13th-place finish.
“It was the hit of Santa Cruz,†Quinn said. “The crowd thought it was
fun, and it was fun being beat by Whitmarsh, who said he couldn’t even
concentrate. In Spain, everyone wears Speedos.â€
Quinn’s attire, though, doesn’t seem to be too far removed from the
ambience of his West Newport ‘hood, which includes a certain former NBA
star with tattoos and pierced body parts.
“We’ve got a place on the beach, but we’ve got (Dennis) Rodman and his
knuckleheads out in front of us, and there’s always some chaos going on
down there,†Quinn said. “There are just groupies everywhere who are all
tattooed.â€
Quinn will play at the AVP Tour stop at Seal Beach along with stars
Canyon Ceman, Karch Kiraly and Brian Lewis.
Lewis, who grew up in Newport Beach and now lives in Huntington Beach,
was a volleyball standout at Corona del Mar High and Orange Coast
College. He led the Pirates to state championships in 1987 and ’89 under
Coach Bob Wetzel.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.