Heather Cullen
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Barry Faulkner
Having emerged triumphantly from the operating room, Heather Cullen
is relishing the ample room she has to operate with the UCLA women’s
volleyball team.
Felled by a torn anterior cruciate ligament during a club practice
in 2000, which robbed her of her senior season at Newport Harbor
High, it was less than a day before Bruin Coach Andy Banachowski
called to assure her a scholarship would remain at the end of her
rehabilitation rainbow.
It was the first and only time in Banachowski’s illustrious 37
years at the UCLA helm he had offered a scholarship to a recruit who
had just sustained such a serious injury. It was not, as it turned
out, much of a gamble.
“I felt confident she would come back, because all the coaches who
had worked with her prior to the injury talked about how determined
and competitive she was,” Banachowski said. “When you get that
combination in a good athlete, you’ve got something.”
The effects of the injury, which Cullen admits slowed her freshman
campaign in Westwood, as well as the rare collection of skills
possessed by the 6-foot-1 standout, initially prevented Banachowski
from clearly defining Cullen’s role with the Bruins.
But now, as a junior tri-captain, Cullen’s diverse talents have
helped Banachowski introduce a system in which she, as well as a few
select teammates, play all three front-line positions.
“It’s an unusual system and something we’ve never done quite this
way,” Banachowski said. “She’ll play on the left side once, the
middle once, and on the right side once. It’s something we’re doing
to try to really take advantage of our kids’ individual talents.
“[Cullen] is very versatile and she has always been very quick off
the floor,” Banachowski said. “She has a lot of experience in the
middle, she has played a couple years on the right side, and she has
also played outside. This new system is kind of fun for all of us.”
Cullen, fully recovered from the knee problem (she shed the
cumbersome knee brace midway through her freshman year), has
blossomed into a leading contributor this season, after a solid
sophomore campaign in which she led the team with 30 service aces.
Through Friday’s Pac-10 victory over Oregon, she was second on the
team in kills (119) and digs (88), while her 23 blocks were
third-best and her nine aces were tied for second among the No.
8-ranked Bruins (10-2, 2-1 in conference).
“She had the talent coming out of high school, but it has taken a
while for her to recover from the injury and regain her confidence,”
Banachowski said. “She is playing with a lot of confidence and she
has really hit a good maturity level. Everyone just kind of looks to
her on the court, because she’s such a good competitor.”
Cullen’s positive impact crystallized during an early season
tournament in Montana, where she was named MVP after helping the
Bruins sweep all three opponents to claim the team title. She had 32
kills in three matches with a .377 attack percentage. She also
chipped in 12 digs.
“She was playing well and we were going to her a lot,” Banachowski
recalled. “It was just a good weekend for her.”
Cullen’s progress in the program has included becoming a much
stronger hitter and a very effective jump server.
“People used to make fun of me, because I didn’t stroke the ball
like I should have,” Cullen said. “It wasn’t like I was patty-caking
it, but I’ve learned to really hit the ball hard. I love playing in
this system, because I get to do a lot of different things. It’s a
really big learning curve because when you play three different
positions, there is something to work on everyday in practice. It
keeps me on my toes, but the last thing I want to be is bored.”
Cullen, a sociology major, has also polished an explosive jump
serve, which has made her a consistent scoring threat from the back
line.
“I used a float serve in high school,” she said. “But I started to
jump serve the winter of my freshman year. It’s awesome to score
points on the serve.”
Cullen, whose high energy is hard to miss on the floor, said she
enjoys the leadership role required of any captain and she believes
her team has great promise this season. She is also gratified to be
contributing so much, both to her teammates and her coach.
“I absolutely feel a responsibility to Andy, because of how he
stood by me [after the injury],” Cullen said. “[A USC recruiter] was
at the practice when I got hurt and, five minutes after the injury,
they told me they wanted to see how the surgery went. But Andy called
me the next day and offered me a scholarship again. That was
awesome.”
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