Speraw pumped at UCI
The UC Irvine menās volleyball team is dealing with life without Coach John Speraw, who will miss two more matches during a six-match sabbatical while working as an assistant coach for the menās national team that is trying to qualify in Puerto Rico for the 2008 Olympics.
Anteaters fans have long dreaded the thought that Speraw could put UCI in his rear-view mirror when Al Skates, in his 45th season, will step down at UCLA, where Speraw both played and coached. Speraw, however, said UCI has made steps to help him in his goal to make running the Anteatersā program the best collegiate job in the sport.
āIāve had to share my thoughts on [being an heir apparent to Skates] since my very first home visit as coach at UCI,ā Speraw said. āI was surprised by that question then, but I havenāt been since. Now, if Iām focused on what Iām doing, Iām the one who is initiating that discussion when I go in to talk to a recruit.
āI tell them that Al is going to be there for a while. Heās basically in a retired state right now. Heās got the best support system in America in menās volleyball. Heās got great assistant coaches, good depth, and a great school that he can continue to recruit from. I donāt think heās going anywhere. I think youāre going to have to drag him off the court. Maybe in a wheelchair, or on a cane, or when he canāt hear the whistle anymore, thatās when Al is going to leave.
āUCLA is a tremendous school and I had a great experience there. But Iām always interested in getting this [UCI] job to the point where I donāt want to leave it. And I think [the school] has done a lot for me the last 18 months.ā
Speraw, who took the Anteaters to the Final Four in 2006, after winning the programās first Mountain Pacific Sports Federation regular-season championship, then won the programās first national title in his fifth season in 2007, said UCI has boosted the programās scholarships to the maximum 4.5. He also said he now has funding for a full-time assistant coach, has a salary commensurate with his standing as an elite volleyball coach, and he will soon be moving into a house on campus.
āIf we continue to win national championships and [the school] is continuing to support me the way I feel Iāve been supported the last 18 months, then five years from now, or 10 years, whenever Al finally decides to hang āem up, and I maybe have a family and kids at that point and Iām living on campus, this could be the best job in America. And I donāt think weāre that far off.ā
āReassuring, yes, but Speraw, like many other Anteaters coaches, believes that UCI still has many hurdles to climb, in terms of leveling the playing field with other big-time athletic programs.
Toward that end, he said the recent hiring of Mike Izzi as athletic director should help.
āIām fired up about it,ā Speraw said of Izzi, who comes to UCI having worked most recently in development/fundraising at Stanford. āI was on the hiring committee, so I know that Mike is someone who wants to be here and he has a background thatās going to be advantageous for this department. I think heās going to be very supportive in what we do and Iām excited about [his hiring].ā
Speraw said Izziās fundraising skills could help make inroads toward upgrading UCIās facilities.
āWe need someone at the top pushing to take advantage of what weāve achieved over the last year and push us to the next level,ā Speraw said. āI think [Izzi] could be that guy. When he was going through the interview process, he was saying some things about fundraising that I hadnāt thought of before.ā
āSperaw said his experience with the national team, which included a hectic summer and the aforementioned commitment in Puerto Rico, has helped him improve as a coach. He said it has also made him appreciate his situation at UCI.
āWhat Iāve learned most is that thereās no better place to play volleyball in the world than what goes on in our gym at UC Irvine,ā Speraw said. āIām absolutely convinced that what we have here is truly a special and unique dynamic. The chemistry of the guys, our collective goal, the competitiveness and our work ethic; All these things that these [UCI] guys have are really special. I can tell you right now that whether weāre .500 or 20-and-whatever, Iām going to enjoy this season more because of my experiences this past summer.ā
āUCI womenās basketball coach Molly Tuter, who was an assistant in 2003-04, when Kristen Green was a senior standout for the Anteaters, had no ambivalance whatsoever about Greenās opportunity to play for the Orange County Gladiators in the American Basketball Assn., a menās professional league.
āI think itās awesome,ā Tuter said Sunday, before Green scored two points in eight-plus minutes in her Gladiators debut. āItās absolutely fantastic and Iām so happy for her. Itās good for Kristen, itās good for UC Irvine, itās good for womenās basketball.ā
BARRY FAULKNER may be reached at (714) 966-4615 or at [email protected].
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