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Post by abcd098 on Aug 14, 2021 13:42:32 GMT -5
For tomorrow's preview, the RNG machine has decided: Please leave off the Spring 2021 recap. No one wants to relive that. 🤪
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Post by vbjustice on Aug 14, 2021 15:26:31 GMT -5
For tomorrow's preview, the RNG machine has decided: Please leave off the Spring 2021 recap. No one wants to relive that. 🤪 lollll
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Post by Kingsley on Aug 15, 2021 9:39:03 GMT -5
Eager to read the Indiana report. Will Indiana in Aird’s 4th season finish in the top 10 of 14 league teams? Indiana is on the previous page. Much-anticipated Michigan State is going up shortly.
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Post by Kingsley on Aug 15, 2021 10:21:53 GMT -5
Michigan State SpartansSpring 2021 Overall Record: 3-12 Conference Record: 3-12 (14th) NCAA Tournament Placement: N/A (Last tournament appearance: 2017 -- Regional Finals) Final AVCA Ranking: NR Head Coach: Cathy George (17th season at Michigan State) Record at Michigan State: 290-215 Returning Starters:Celia Cullen - SO, 6'1 S Talia Edmonds - R-JR, 5'7 DS/L Sarah Franklin - R-FR, 6'4 OH/RS Naya Gros - SR, 6'3 MB Biamba Kabengele - JR, 6'0 OH Cecilee Max-Brown - JR, 6'1 OH Rebecka Poljan - SR, 6'2 MB Departures (* denotes starter):Alyssa Chronowski* - 6'2 OH Jamye Cox* - 5'6 L (Grad transfer to Arizona State) Julia Hatcher - 6'3 MB Meredith Norris* - 6'3 OH Elena Shklyar - 6'1 S (Transfer to Arizona) Lauren Swartz - 6'5 OH/RS Incoming Players (* denotes Spring 2021 enrollee):Julia Bishop - FR, 5'11 S Grace Danziger* - FR, 5'7 DS/L Aubrey O'Gorman - FR, 6'2 MB Abby Olin - FR, 6'3 MB Spring 2021 Recap:So, it didn't go well. It all started in Minneapolis, where Michigan State choked a couple massive set leads to fall in back-to-back sweeps against the Golden Gophers. The Spartans had their home debut against Ohio State. Green got swept in the series opener and couldn't seal the deal in the fifth set of the rematch. A road trip to Maryland got the Spartans on track with a pair of four-set triumphs. A mid-week matchup against Michigan did not go as well, and a pair of contests against Wisconsin ended in defeat. Then, COVID. Michigan State sat idle for almost a month and returned to Jenison only to get thrashed by Penn State. The Spartans at least managed to split with Iowa. Lastly, a duo of home defeats against Rutgers finally capped off a dismal season. The Lineup:Buckle up. Let me take you back to the first match of the spring season for the Spartans. Michigan State shows up in Minneapolis running a 5-1. Celia Cullen is the setter, Meredith Norris is the L1, Sarah Franklin is the L2, Molly Johnson is at opposite, Naya Gros is playing M1, and Rebecka Poljan is at M2. Jamye Cox is obviously at libero. Don't memorize all that because it won't be on the test. It takes only one set for Coach George to swap things around. In the second set of the opener, Biamba Kabengele replaces Johnson at opposite, Gros moves to M2, and Emma Monks replaces Poljan to play M1. Fast forward to the following match and, surprise, the Spartans are in a 6-2 with Cullen and Elena Shklyar. The opposites were Johnson and Lauren Swartz. To the Ohio State series. The 6-2 returns for the first match of the series before the Cullen 5-1 reemerges for the rematch. Norris is now frequently trading places with Cecilee Max-Brown. To the Maryland series (don't bail on me yet!). It's still a 5-1, but now the left sides are Franklin and Kabengele. The opposite is Alyssa Chronowski. Poljan is also back. I could go on, but it's too painful. Franklin suffers a right arm injury after the Michigan match and is done for good. It basically devolves into chaos at that point. Maybe we can visualize something for the fall, though. Slot Franklin in for six rotations again this fall. Thank goodness for that. The other left side will likely be Max-Brown, and she'll play across the back row, too. Libero will be a battle with Cox gone. You'll see Lauryn Gibbs, Talia Edmonds, and Grace Danziger all vying for that spot. Gros is back in the middle, and perhaps solidly at M1 this time. Poljan and Monks will have to hold off some pressure from true freshmen Aubrey O'Gorman and Abby Olin for the other middle spot. If I had to choose a starting opposite, I'd lean toward Kabengele. Of course, Cathy George could come in and rip all that to shreds. Heck, send in Julia Bishop to help run a 6-2 just for good measure. I won't be bitter at all. The Schedule:Michigan State usually doesn't schedule tough, and the fall non-conference slate is par for the course. That opening week matchup against Wright State is rather quaint, though. The highlight of MSU's pre-conference journey will be a trip to Provo to face BYU and a couple of its in-state subsidiaries. Lest ye overlook Weber State! Like Michigan, the Spartans also get some impromptu shootyhoops with Duke and North Carolina. Now, here's conference play: The Verdict:There really is nowhere to go but up for Michigan State. After last season's last-place finish, a little consistency and continuity would go a long way for this team. You could argue that the Spartans don't end up at rock bottom if they had Franklin for the whole year. Maybe they don't get double blanked by Rutgers if that series was played before MSU got slammed with COVID. Oh well. It's over now. Michigan State has ample talent to finish above the bottom tier of the Big Ten. This is not a program that belongs in the lowest four or five teams in the conference, let alone dead last. It remains to be seen, though, how this team will emerge from a spring season that was a perfect disaster in every regard. Will we see more musical chairs in the starting lineup? This team really does have a penchant for the ol' sit 'n' shuffle. Like many of the other teams I've reviewed so far, passing is going to be a serious question mark. Can the defensive specialists put something together without Cox? Will Franklin and Max-Brown effectively shoulder their own serve receive responsibilities? Even after the hot mess of the spring, an 8th- to 10th-place finish in conference actually feels doable. I don't see anything higher than that.
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Post by Kingsley on Aug 15, 2021 10:22:17 GMT -5
For tomorrow's preview, the RNG machine has decided:
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Post by Kingsley on Aug 15, 2021 10:23:15 GMT -5
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Post by eazy on Aug 15, 2021 17:43:46 GMT -5
Michigan State is going to be Dixie State's first ever P5 opponent, at that Provo shindig. And first p5 win!
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Post by Kingsley on Aug 16, 2021 11:10:53 GMT -5
-I found one conflict, and it's been noted with an asterisk. Scroll to November and pay attention to Iowa and Indiana chilling next to each other. Indiana thinks its home match against Iowa is on Saturday the 20th, while Iowa claims it's on Sunday the 21st. If there's any SIDs listening, a cage match is in order to determine who's the real Dirty Dan. As I'm finishing Iowa, it's apparent that the true date for this match is Sunday, Nov. 21. The Hawkeyes were the real Dirty Dan. The Matrix has been reloaded repaired.
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Post by Kingsley on Aug 16, 2021 11:59:45 GMT -5
Iowa HawkeyesSpring 2021 Overall Record: 4-16 Conference Record: 4-16 (13th) NCAA Tournament Placement: N/A (Last tournament appearance: 1994 -- First Round) Final AVCA Ranking: NR Head Coach: Vicki Brown (3rd season at Iowa) Record at Iowa: 14-37 Returning Starters:Audrey Black - SO, 6'3 OH Courtney Buzzerio - SR, 6'5 S/RS Hannah Clayton - SR, 6'2 MB Amiya Jones - SR, 6'2 MB Leanne Lowry - SO, 5'11 DS/L Bailey Ortega - SO, 5'9 S Blythe Rients - JR, 6'2 MB/RS Edina Schmidt - JR, 6'1 OH Maddie Slagle - SR, 5'9 DS/L Departures (* denotes starter):Joslyn Boyer* - JR, 5'6 L (Transfer to Wisconsin) Incoming Players (* denotes Spring 2021 enrollee):Sydney Dennis* - FR, 5'5 DS/L Mari Hinkle - JR, 5'9 DS/L (Transfer from UCLA) Oluwatoyosi Onabanjo - FR, 6'0 MB Jenna Splitt* - FR, 5'11 S/RS Addie VanderWeide - FR, 6'1 OH Spring 2021 Recap:Iowa started the season at home with a pair of four-set losses to Illinois. Things got even tougher as a road trip to Purdue yielded no set victories. The Hawkeyes finally got in the win column with a home win over Indiana, but the Hoosiers managed to split the series. After another pair of road defeats at the hands of Ohio State, Iowa mustered two more splits against Rutgers and Northwestern. A very disappointing road series against Maryland left the Hawkeyes battling at the bottom of the Big Ten. A home-and-home against Nebraska was fruitless, but Iowa picked up a sweep over Michigan State for the season's fourth win. Two more road losses against Minnesota wrapped up the season. The Lineup:Like most of the teams that finished near the bottom of the Big Ten last season, Iowa underwent some notable lineup changes throughout the spring. The Hawkeyes came out of the gates in 2021 running a 6-2. That wasn't surprising. Bailey Ortega was at setter, Courtney Buzzerio returned as a front-row opposite and back-row setter, Edina Schmidt played left side with Maddie Slagle as her DS, Kyndra Hansen was a six-rotation left side, Blythe Rients and Hannah Clayton were the middles, Audrey Black was the other opposite, and Joslyn Boyer was the libero. Hansen did not appear in the following week's series against Purdue. Emma Grunkemeyer played opposite with Black moving to the left. Hansen then reemerged in the Indiana series, but an injury after those matchups kept her out for the rest of the season. After having to sit out to start the year, Amiya Jones reclaimed her starting spot in the Ohio State series. This is when Iowa settled on the lineup they'd use for...a few weeks. In a way, it was a 6-2 with three middle blockers. Jones was technically an opposite in the rotation, but she shifted to the middle post-serve. Rients and Clayton were the "real" middles, but they played on the right pin when they shared the front row with Jones. Isn't that fun? Eventually, though, Jones and Rients switched places in the lineup. Way to kill the novelty, Hawkeyes. They'd stick with this for the Maryland series onward to the end of the season. Boyer (Wisconsin) was the only offseason loss for a team that had no seniors in the spring. Adding Mari Hinkle (UCLA) should help solve the libero spot. Slagle and Leanne Lowry will continue to contribute as defensive specialists, especially if Hansen is still out. The start of the fall season will probably be status quo for Iowa. It's another 6-2 with largely the same personnel. They really don't have a choice, do they? I could see freshman Addie VanderWeide pushing Black or Schmidt for playing time on the left. We'll see if Hansen is ready. In any case, Iowa needs a spark on the left. Buzzerio, meanwhile, will lead as a setter and a hitter once again. The Schedule:Yeesh. If there's a Big Ten team at risk of being squeezed into a hearty handful of L's in non-conference, this might be the one. Landmines everywhere. I'll give Iowa the benefit of the doubt and say that the opening matches against Duke and Coastal Carolina are toss-ups. Colorado will not be easy. Syracuse will be formidable if their Russian army returns to form. Cy-Hawk should be a battle, and a road trip to Denver is no gimme, either. Of course, if all those matches are landmines, then Washington is the M.O.A.B. Iowa has overperformed in non-conference before, so don't chalk up all the aforementioned matches as losses. Except Washington. I'm giving you permission to chalk that one. Here's the conference slate: The Verdict:Again, Iowa has to somehow find a spark with almost the same lineup that yielded a 4-16 performance in the spring. Maybe the experience and continuity will help a little bit. At the same time, though, there are glaring deficiencies that need to improve if Iowa is to reach another level. Most notably, someone needs to help Buzzerio offensively. You'd like to see that help come from the left pin, where Black and Schmidt hit .062 and .133 last season, respectively. It has to be better. So, it really comes down to how many steps forward you expect these familiar players to take. Hopefully, this team doesn't get discouraged if they take a few bumps in non-conference play. Big Ten double-dips against Northwestern and Indiana will be important if the Hawkeyes want to stay above rock bottom. In the end, though, another finish in the bottom four of the B1G seems inevitable.
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Post by Kingsley on Aug 16, 2021 12:00:21 GMT -5
For tomorrow's preview, the RNG machine has decided:
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Post by hawkfan on Aug 16, 2021 12:37:52 GMT -5
Iowa HawkeyesSpring 2021 Overall Record: 4-16 Conference Record: 4-16 (13th) NCAA Tournament Placement: N/A (Last tournament appearance: 1994 -- First Round) Final AVCA Ranking: NR Head Coach: Vicki Brown (3rd season at Iowa) Record at Iowa: 14-37 Returning Starters:Audrey Black - SO, 6'3 OH Courtney Buzzerio - SR, 6'5 S/RS Hannah Clayton - SR, 6'2 MB Amiya Jones - SR, 6'2 MB Leanne Lowry - SO, 5'11 DS/L Bailey Ortega - SO, 5'9 S Blythe Rients - JR, 6'2 MB/RS Edina Schmidt - JR, 6'1 OH Maddie Slagle - SR, 5'9 DS/L Departures (* denotes starter):Joslyn Boyer* - JR, 5'6 L (Transfer to Wisconsin) Incoming Players (* denotes Spring 2021 enrollee):Sydney Dennis* - FR, 5'5 DS/L Mari Hinkle - JR, 5'9 DS/L (Transfer from UCLA) Oluwatoyosi Onabanjo - FR, 6'0 MB Jenna Splitt* - FR, 5'11 S/RS Addie VanderWeide - FR, 6'1 OH Spring 2021 Recap:Iowa started the season at home with a pair of four-set losses to Illinois. Things got even tougher as a road trip to Purdue yielded no set victories. The Hawkeyes finally got in the win column with a home win over Indiana, but the Hoosiers managed to split the series. After another pair of road defeats at the hands of Ohio State, Iowa mustered two more splits against Rutgers and Northwestern. A very disappointing road series against Maryland left the Hawkeyes battling at the bottom of the Big Ten. A home-and-home against Nebraska was fruitless, but Iowa picked up a sweep over Michigan State for the season's fourth win. Two more road losses against Minnesota wrapped up the season. The Lineup:Like most of the teams that finished near the bottom of the Big Ten last season, Iowa underwent some notable lineup changes throughout the spring. The Hawkeyes came out of the gates in 2021 running a 6-2. That wasn't surprising. Bailey Ortega was at setter, Courtney Buzzerio returned as a front-row opposite and back-row setter, Edina Schmidt played left side with Maddie Slagle as her DS, Kyndra Hansen was a six-rotation left side, Blythe Rients and Hannah Clayton were the middles, Audrey Black was the other opposite, and Joslyn Boyer was the libero. Hansen did not appear in the following week's series against Purdue. Emma Grunkemeyer played opposite with Black moving to the left. Hansen then reemerged in the Indiana series, but an injury after those matchups kept her out for the rest of the season. After having to sit out to start the year, Amiya Jones reclaimed her starting spot in the Ohio State series. This is when Iowa settled on the lineup they'd use for...a few weeks. In a way, it was a 6-2 with three middle blockers. Jones was technically an opposite in the rotation, but she shifted to the middle post-serve. Rients and Clayton were the "real" middles, but they played on the right pin when they shared the front row with Jones. Isn't that fun? Eventually, though, Jones and Rients switched places in the lineup. Way to kill the novelty, Hawkeyes. They'd stick with this for the Maryland series onward to the end of the season. Boyer (Wisconsin) was the only offseason loss for a team that had no seniors in the spring. Adding Mari Hinkle (UCLA) should help solve the libero spot. Slagle and Leanne Lowry will continue to contribute as defensive specialists, especially if Hansen is still out. The start of the fall season will probably be status quo for Iowa. It's another 6-2 with largely the same personnel. They really don't have a choice, do they? I could see freshman Addie VanderWeide pushing Black or Schmidt for playing time on the left. We'll see if Hansen is ready. In any case, Iowa needs a spark on the left. Buzzerio, meanwhile, will lead as a setter and a hitter once again. The Schedule:Yeesh. If there's a Big Ten team at risk of being squeezed into a hearty handful of L's in non-conference, this might be the one. Landmines everywhere. I'll give Iowa the benefit of the doubt and say that the opening matches against Duke and Coastal Carolina are toss-ups. Colorado will not be easy. Syracuse will be formidable if their Russian army returns to form. Cy-Hawk should be a battle, and a road trip to Denver is no gimme, either. Of course, if all those matches are landmines, then Washington is the M.O.A.B. Iowa has overperformed in non-conference before, so don't chalk up all the aforementioned matches as losses. Except Washington. I'm giving you permission to chalk that one. Here's the conference slate: The Verdict:Again, Iowa has to somehow find a spark with almost the same lineup that yielded a 4-16 performance in the spring. Maybe the experience and continuity will help a little bit. At the same time, though, there are glaring deficiencies that need to improve if Iowa is to reach another level. Most notably, someone needs to help Buzzerio offensively. You'd like to see that help come from the left pin, where Black and Schmidt hit .062 and .133 last season, respectively. It has to be better. So, it really comes down to how many steps forward you expect these familiar players to take. Hopefully, this team doesn't get discouraged if they take a few bumps in non-conference play. Big Ten double-dips against Northwestern and Indiana will be important if the Hawkeyes want to stay above rock bottom. In the end, though, another finish in the bottom four of the B1G seems inevitable. Really great write-up (as expected from you )...thanks for this! I believe this is an accurate and fair assessment for the most part. The two pieces I would add: - I am betting Buzzerio may not be setting again this year with the addition of Frosh setter Jenna Splitt to the mix. Splitt is talented and had the spring to get accustomed to things from the sideline as a spring enrollee. If the Hawks stick with a 6-2, I would see Splitt and Ortega in the setter roles, which will allow C Buzz to truly focus on RS duties. For two years, Buzzerio essentially had to fill in as setter (admirably, I might add). I don't see that being necessary this year...but sure could be wrong, of course, depending on how Coach Brown approaches things. - I don't see reference anywhere to OH transfer Kacia Brown (Kaz Brown's sister), who transferred to Iowa from Mississippi State mid-year last year. Because she had played at MSU a bit during their fall 2020 season, she had to sit out in the spring at Iowa. She was the 2019 Iowa Gatorade Player of the Year. I could see Brown adding some much-needed firepower on the left pin...especially if Hansen is unable to play again or would be less than 100%. It will be interesting to see how this fall goes. Will be great to be in our new arena with fans. The pre-conference schedule is indeed aggressive. I see the Hawks making strides after a tough spring that involved some injuries and also piecing things together after losing our senior setter, senior leading OH and senior libero due to opting out. I think your assessment is on point about where they will likely finish in B1G but I do think they will surprise some along the way. Thanks again for this and GO HAWKS!
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Post by volleyaudience on Aug 16, 2021 13:50:35 GMT -5
Who sees a pretty competitive fight this season between some of Purdue, OSU, Penn State, Illinois, Northwestern, & Michigan to move up to or to hold a seat at the head table? Thoughts?
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Post by vbjustice on Aug 16, 2021 18:17:09 GMT -5
Who sees a pretty competitive fight this season between some of Purdue, OSU, Penn State, Illinois, Northwestern, & Michigan to move up to or to hold a seat at the head table? Thoughts? northwestern?!?! Nope.
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Post by Brutus Buckeye on Aug 16, 2021 18:22:32 GMT -5
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Post by Kingsley on Aug 17, 2021 12:47:04 GMT -5
Minnesota Golden GophersSpring 2021 Overall Record: 16-3 Conference Record: 15-2 (2nd) NCAA Tournament Placement: Regional Semifinals (L, 2-3 vs. Pittsburgh) Final AVCA Ranking: 9 Head Coach: Hugh McCutcheon (10th season at Minnesota) Record at Minnesota: 232-56 Returning Starters:Rachel Kilkelly - JR, 5'9 DS/L Taylor Landfair - SO, 6'4 OH CC McGraw - SR, 5'9 L Shea Rubright - JR, 6'5 MB Stephanie Samedy - SR+, 6'3 RS Melani Shaffmaster - SO, 6'3 S Jenna Wenaas - SO, 6'3 OH/DS Airi Miyabe - SR+, 6'0 OH/MB/RS Departures (* denotes starter):Hunter Atherton - 5'10 S Adanna Rollins* - GRAD, 6'0 OH (Grad transfer to Penn State) Regan Pittman* - 6'5 MB Incoming Players:Lauren Crowl - FR, 6'4 RS Natalie Glenn - FR, 5'10 OH/RS Skylar Gray - FR, 5'10 OH Anna Wolf - FR, 6'3 MB Spring 2021 Recap:Minnesota began the spring season by clawing its way to a pair of home sweeps against Michigan State. You could probably use the same descriptors for the next two sweeps at Maryland. Then, it was on to the infamous Purdue road series, where the universe clearly dictated that the Golden Gophers could not lose. Minnesota overcame a battered roster and a Caitlyn Newton onslaught to win two five-set battles and move to 6-0. The Golden Gophers returned home and pulled out another pair of quality wins against Penn State. Up next was a trip to Nebraska, where both teams handed each other their first losses of the season. Minnesota was forced to take a couple of weeks off before their bout with Illinois. It didn't come easily, but the series ended with two more in the win column for the Golden Gophers. The next on-court appearance for Minnesota was against Wisconsin. With a big medley of injuries and COVID, what ensued could loosely be called a volleyball match. The Golden Gophers took the loss, but matchups against Northwestern and Iowa helped right the ship before the NCAA Tournament. Minnesota snatched the third-overall seed in the postseason and had a second-round matchup against Georgia Tech. The Golden Gophers survived the Brazilian Stingy Bees, but then the regional semifinal boogeyman showed up again. Pitt scored the upset of the tournament and ended Minnesota's year at 16-3. The Lineup:It is worth taking a moment to acknowledge a few key shakeups in Minnesota's lineup during the spring season. Maybe it will set a nice backdrop for what the Golden Gophers will be hoping for moving forward. Of course, Minnesota came out in the anticipated lineup of Melani Shaffmaster at setter, Taylor Landfair at L1 ( Rachel Kilkelly was her DS), Adanna Rollins at L2, Regan Pittman at M1, Katie Myers at M2, Stephanie Samedy at opposite, and CC McGraw at libero. Y'all know that. This lineup was short-lived, though. Myers dealt with some hardships during the spring and ceded her spot in the lineup by early February. Shea Rubright took over the M2 spot for the rest of the year. The biggest long-term loss for this team came at libero. It was clear during the Purdue series that McGraw was not feeling well, and she sat out of the road trip after two sets. Kilkelly moved to libero and Jenna Wenaas took over at DS. McGraw was back on the court the following few weeks, though, until she suffered a knee injury in the second match against Illinois. After facing unspeakable adversity during the spring season, Minnesota is hoping their libero can reassume her vital role in the program this fall. Obviously, the Golden Gophers also have to deal with the departure of multi-year contributors Pittman and Rollins. The hope is that Myers can return to her Terrapin form and Wenaas can provide some steady offense and ball control as a six-rotation starter. Airi Miyabe is also back and can be a do-anything substitute whenever needed. A little middle offense from Myers and Rubright would go a long way this fall. Far too often, the M2 was a non-factor offensively. Rubright took four swings in the five-set loss to Pitt. I'm not here to assign blame for why this kept happening, but you can bet that Minnesota is working on their quicks during fall camp. This is especially important now that Pittman is no longer around to pick up the slack at M1. Minnesota can surely get by with the "set Samedy and profit" strategy in many situations, but I'll be interested to see how this group comes together. You can choose to fixate on the question marks, but the Golden Gophers are still as talented as anybody. The Schedule:Assemble the death gauntlet. Minnesota messed around and created one of the most formidable non-conference schedules in America. It all starts on opening day with a neutral site duel with the Baylor Bears. Skip TCU. The Pav will host a Wednesday matchup with the top-ranked Longhorns before Minnesota travels down to Gainesville to play Florida. Stanford and Oregon are also looming. Here's the conference breakdown. It includes an unexpected shoutout to National Public Radio: The Verdict:There's been a fair bit of debate on this one. Some things we just won't know for sure until we see them. That's what makes the offseason fun, right? Minnesota is a top ten team as long as Samedy is still Samedy. I don't think that's a hot take. When she goes off and takes over a match, all of Minnesota's other problems seemingly become trivial. Obviously, the Golden Gophers should strive for a failsafe in case Samedy turns out to be human. Will Wenaas step in and be a reliable six-rotation L2? Can Minnesota finally get some offense from their middles, especially now that Pittman is gone? This team has some things to work out, but their high ceiling will always be there. Minnesota can step onto the court and compete with anyone. How well they address their deficiencies and personnel changes will determine how consistent this team is. Smooth out the highs and lows. The Golden Gophers will notch another top-four finish in the B1G. If this team comes together nicely, getting past the regional semifinals is a reasonable expectation.
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