Nordmann Finds Place Among State's Elite

By Geoff Kimmerly
MHSAA.com senior editor

September 13, 2016

DEWITT – Lexi Nordmann had a hard time finding her place at first after joining DeWitt’s varsity volleyball team four seasons ago.

A rare freshman playing for one of mid-Michigan’s top programs, Nordmann played the middle, just like then-junior Abby Nakfoor – and Nakfoor figured out quickly that her younger teammate’s skill level was already far above her own.

But what Nakfoor also found about the new teammate she fondly called her “Baby Lex” no doubt has helped Nordmann turn into much more than another tall player standing in front of the net.

“She was still always open to my input, even though skill-wise she was a full head above me,” said Nakfoor, now a sophomore on the Ferris State University basketball team. “She’s so open to learning. As a freshman she’d get frustrated, and who doesn’t, but if she didn’t get something she was always texting me – ‘in practice, what would you run here; what should I do differently?’ – and that just comes from her eagerness to be a better player.”  

“It sounds kinda dumb, but it’s like a mom thing. I’m so proud. I’d always call her my baby Lex, my baby freshman, and we’d always take pictures of me holding her, cradling her. But now … what she’s meant to that volleyball program, those girls look up to her so much.”

And for plenty of compelling reasons.

Nordmann is one of 10 candidates for this season’s Miss Volleyball Award sponsored by the Michigan Interscholastic Volleyball Coaches Association, and that means a little more than it might in other regions of the state. Not including Corunna’s Meredith Norris, who also is a finalist this season, the last mid-Michigan player to make the ballot was Lake Odessa Lakewood’s Chelsea Lake in 2010. Drawing closer the home, the last player from Lansing or its closest suburbs to be considered was East Lansing’s Heather Brooks in 2006. 

Nordmann is 6-foot-1 with a vertical jump that allows her to touch above 10 feet. She’s powerful in the middle, no longer the “scrawny freshman” coach Christy Thelen brought up to varsity straight out of junior high. And her athleticism is drawn from a family tree that has included multiple generations of basketball stars including a grandfather who played in the NBA.

But the difference might be what sits above her ball-smashing shoulders.

Also the daughter of a former DeWitt High School teacher, Nordmann loves to learn. She especially likes math; it’s an academic discipline that fits the 4.0 student’s perfectionist personality.

If she sees something wrong, she fixes it. And despite relatively limited experience on the volleyball court heading into high school, she picked up quickly a knowledge that combined with her intellect continues to give her an edge.

“I think it’s actually contributed a lot to my being able to play at a higher level,” Nordmann said. “Because I’m used to not only multi-tasking, but being able to read the court and see other things. Being able to understand and read the other side of the net and not focusing on just you, but being able to take in everything at the same time. I think that’s very important, being able to see the court.”

Nordmann already has accomplished much. She’s listed twice in the MHSAA record book; her 239 blocks last season rank third since the rally scoring era began with the 2004-05 season, and she had 39 kills – tied for sixth-most – in last season’s Class A Regional Final loss to Mattawan. Nordmann finished the season with 511 kills and a ridiculous .460 kill efficiency in helping DeWitt to a 44-4-1 record.

The Panthers are 16-0 this fall after winning the Mount Morris Invitational over the weekend, and Nordmann has had her share of impressive performances during the opening run. She had 67 kills with only eight errors over six matches at the Alma Invitational, where DeWitt defeated among others Class B No. 1 Lakewood, and she had 12 kills Wednesday against Mason despite facing triple blocks.

As noted, she’s from a basketball family. Her late grandfather Bob Nordmann played four seasons in the National Basketball Association as a 6-foot-10 center and later served as an assistant coach at Michigan State. Her dad Matt played at Navy and then George Washington University, while her uncle Eric played professionally overseas and her aunt Andrea Nordmann played college basketball at Bowling Green State.

Lexi didn’t take up volleyball until seventh grade, and didn’t take it up seriously until eighth, when she tried out for a club team in part to get a free T-shirt. Thelen, who teaches math at the junior high, knew more about Nordmann as a student – she took the advanced math class and was selected by teachers to go to Japan as part of an annual exchange program – but Nordmann then also showed enough potential to be brought up to varsity immediately after entering high school.

“Her knowledge of volleyball and understanding of blocks and the scheme of it, she’s probably one of the smartest kids I’ve ever coached,” said Thelen, in her ninth season coaching the varsity and a former all-state setter for the Panthers. “Understanding why we’re doing such things, why she should go here on a tip, those kinds of things; a lot of times you have to coach that a lot, and she just knows.”

Nordmann has grown only two inches in height since freshman year but tremendously in other ways. Nakfoor was a natural leader and Nordmann, admittedly, is naturally quieter. In fact, Nordmann sent her mentor a video last year of a postmatch interview they gave where Nakfoor answered all the questions while Nordmann nodded and added, in essence, “Yeah, what Abby said.”

But Nordmann has taken on a leadership role since Nakfoor graduated, telling Thelen in part that on the court that she tries to do what Nakfoor would do, say what Nakfoor would say. And Nordmann has become a mentor as well for a number of younger players like sophomore middle Desiree Becker, another big-time player in the making.

“She’s grown leadership-wise, as a junior especially, and she’s just leading, showing the younger girls the ropes just how she had been shown the ropes. She has a much bigger voice now too,” Nakfoor said. “I have a cousin on the team right now (Bailey Yonkman) who looks up to Lexi a lot, and my little sister (Meredith) is in the program (and does too).”

Nordmann will play after high school at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas, not far from where her aunt Andrea is an associate athletic director for compliance at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth.

Lexi is thinking about becoming an engineer, or she might study business. Then again, she took an Advanced Placement history class last year that she loved. “I do enjoy learning all different (subjects),” Nordmann said. “I’m still looking for that one that I’m passionate about.”

She’s got time to figure out her future, of course, and will have plenty of options given her academic mastery.

But athletically, she’s found her passion – and her place as DeWitt’s leader as well.

“In junior high, obviously I used to play basketball. Coming from that family, that’s what they did,” Nordmann said. “But the team aspect of volleyball is just so much more evident. After you get a point or your teammates get a point, there’s so much more excitement and momentum and there’s more coming together. That feeling of getting a block or a kill, or when your teammate gets a sweet dig, it’s so exhilarating. It pumps you up.” 

Geoff Kimmerly joined the MHSAA as its Media & Content Coordinator in Sept. 2011 after 12 years as Prep Sports Editor of the Lansing State Journal. He has served as Editor of Second Half since its creation in Jan. 2012. Contact him at [email protected] with story ideas for the Barry, Eaton, Ingham, Livingston, Ionia, Clinton, Shiawassee, Gratiot, Isabella, Clare and Montcalm counties.

PHOTOS: (Top) DeWitt's Lexi Nordmann celebrates a point with her teammates this season. (Middle) Nordmann, a senior middle, unloads a kill attempt. (Below) Nordmann awaits an opponent's serve. (Photos by Tom Pearson/TCP-Photography.)

Preview: Hopefuls Converge on Kellogg

November 14, 2018

By Geoff Kimmerly
Second Half editor

There are important changes to note as we move into the final weekend of the 2018 Michigan high school girls volleyball season.

First, remember that Classes A, B, C and D are no longer. This weekend will see the first champions of Divisions 1, 2, 3 and 4.

And while Pontiac Notre Dame Prep and Bronson are seeking to repeat, only two more of the 16 teams from last season’s field will be joining them back at Battle Creek's Kellogg Arena. From this mostly-new group of contenders, nine teams are seeking their first championship in this sport and six are hoping to make the final day’s matches for the first time.

Below is this weekend’s schedule:

Division 1 Semifinals – Friday
Lake Orion vs. Farmington Hills Mercy, 4:30 p.m.
Northville vs. Rockford, 6:30 p.m.

Division 2 Semifinals - Thursday
Grand Rapids Christian vs. Lake Odessa Lakewood, 4:30 p.m. 
Pontiac Notre Dame Prep vs. Corunna, 6:30 p.m.

Division 3 Semifinals – Thursday
Unionville-Sebewaing vs. Traverse City St. Francis, Noon
Monroe St. Mary Catholic Central vs. Bronson, 2 p.m.

Division 4 Semifinals - Friday
Mendon vs. Southfield Christian, Noon
Leland vs. Carney-Nadeau, 2 p.m.

Finals – Saturday
Division 1, 2 p.m. 
Division 2, 4 p.m. 
Division 3, Noon
Division 4, 10 a.m.

Click for links to all results from this season’s tournament plus ticket information and details on live broadcasts of all 12 matches this weekend on MHSAA.tv and MHSAANetwork.com. Below is a glance at all 16 contenders, with statistics through last week's Regional Finals unless noted. 

Division 1

FARMINGTON HILLS MERCY
Record/rank:
 52-2, No. 1
Coach: Loretta Vogel, 10th season (record N/A)
League finish: First in Detroit Catholic League Central
Championship history: Class A runner-up 2010. 
Best wins: 3-0 (Regional Final) plus five regular-season sweeps of No. 6 Bloomfield Hills Marian, 2-0 and 2-0 over No. 2 Lake Orion, 2-0 over honorable mention Clarkston, 2-1 over honorable Temperance Bedford, 2-0 over No. 9 Rochester Hills Stoney Creek, 2-0 and 2-0 over Division 2 No. 1 Grand Rapids Christian.
Players to watch: Jess Mruzik, 6-1 jr. OH (377 kills, .416 hitting %); Julia Bishop, 5-11 soph. S (1,329 assists, .589 hitting %); Ella Loussia, 6-1 sr. OH (211 kills, .362 hitting %).
Finals forecast: Mercy, a semifinalist last season as well, hasn’t lost a match in two months and only seven sets this season. Only Lake Orion and Stoney Creek took match victories, and the Marlins avenged both defeats. Mruzik, a returning all-stater, will enter next season as the likely Miss Volleyball Award favorite. Sophomore Charlie Atiemo and senior Mallory Conrad are both 6-0, giving Mercy a stifling block in the middle – and Atiemo was third on the team with 205 kills entering the week and second with a .504 hitting percentage. Mruzik has committed to sign with University of Michigan.

LAKE ORION
Record/rank:
 66-5, No. 2
Coach: Tony Scavarda, fifth season (276-48-2)
League finish: Second in Oakland Activities Association Red
Championship history: Class A runner-up 2011.
Best wins: 2-0 over No. 1 Farmington Hills Mercy, 3-0 (Regional Final) plus two regular-season wins over No. 9 Rochester Hills Stoney Creek, 3-0 (District Final) plus three regular-season wins over honorable mention Clarkston, 2-0 over No. 3 Mattawan, 2-0 over No. 6 Bloomfield Hills Marian, 2-0 over No. 8 Northville, 2-0 over No. 10 Portage Central, 2-0 and 2-0 over honorable mention Novi, 2-0 over Division 2 No. 1 Grand Rapids Christian, 2-0 over Division 2 No. 2 Pontiac Notre Dame Prep.
Players to watch: Paige Briggs, 5-10 sr. OH (679 kills, .396 hitting %, 83 aces); Wren Macaulay, 5-9 sr. S (1,539 assists, 94 aces, 84 blocks, 319 digs); Sydney Smith, 5-10 jr. OPP (277 kills, .323 hitting %).
Finals forecast: Lake Orion has held onto the No. 2 spot in Division 1 as one of only two teams statewide to take a win from Mercy this fall. Briggs was a Miss Volleyball candidate and has the Dragons back at the Semifinals for the first time since the runner-up finish in 2011, and after missing nearly half of her junior season with an injury. Four players had at least 70 blocks entering this week, with 6-2 sophomore middle Kendall Robertson the leader with 99 and third on the team with 233 kills. Lake Orion’s losses were to Mercy (twice), Northville, Stoney Creek and Grand Rapids Christian. Briggs will continue her career at Western Kentucky.

NORTHVILLE
Record/rank:
 47-6-1, No. 8
Coach: Julie Fisette, third season (134-21-4)
League finish: First in Kensington Lakes Activities Association West
Championship history: Has never appeared in an MHSAA Final.
Best wins: 2-1 over No. 2 Lake Orion, 2-1 over No. 10 Portage Central, 2-0 over No. 9 Rochester Hills Stoney Creek, 2-1 over No. 6 Bloomfield Hills Marian, 3-0 (District Final), 3-0 and 2-1 over honorable mention Novi, 3-1 (Regional Semifinal) and 2-1 over honorable mention Temperance Bedford, 2-0 over honorable mention Clarkston.
Players to watch: Clare McNamara, 5-10 jr. MB (353 kills, .309 hitting %, 85 blocks); Gabriella Fisette, 5-9 sr. S (817 assists, 190 digs); Hannah Grant, 5-7 sr. L (661 digs, 70 aces). (Stats include Quarterfinal.)
Finals forecast: The Mustangs will play in their third Semifinal in seven seasons but first under Julie Fisette, who took over three seasons ago but formerly coached for 17 at Novi. Northville ran into the eventual Class A champion Wildcats during the tournament the last three seasons, but prevailed in their meeting this time in the District Final. The team’s only defeats came to Lake Orion, Grand Haven, Clarkston, Bloomfield Hills Marian (twice) and Portage Central.
Grant made the all-state second team last season, and McNamara earned honorable mention.

ROCKFORD
Record/rank:
 46-11-1, No. 7
Coach: Kelly Delacher, 14th season (571-243-13)
League finish: First in Ottawa-Kent Conference Red
Championship history: Class A champion 2011, runner-up 2016.
Best wins: 3-2 (Regional Semifinal), 3-0 and 2-0 over No. 5 Hudsonville, 3-2 (District Final) and 2-1 over No. 4 Lowell, 2-0 and 2-0 over No. 10 Portage Central, 2-1 over No. 3 Mattawan, 2-1 over Division 2 No. 1 Grand Rapids Christian.
Players to watch: Lindsay Taylor, 6-2 sr. OH (689 kills, 65 aces, 352 digs); Emmy Webb, 6-0 sr. MH (408 kills, .373 hitting %, 88 blocks); Emilee Karelse, 5-8 sr. S (1,412 assists, 77 aces, 250 digs).
Finals forecast: The Rams graduated two all-staters after last season but made it back to the Semifinals after ending 2017 in their Regional Final. Taylor made the all-state second team last season, while Webb made a brief appearance in the 2016 championship match. Rockford has won 15 of its last 16, avenging the lone loss of that string by beating Hudsonville in the Regional Semifinal. The team has only four seniors – the three mentioned above and 5-11 outside hitter Alyssa Judge, who was third entering the week with 236 kills and 315 digs and first with 95 aces. Taylor will play collegiately at Miami (Ohio).

Division 2

CORUNNA
Record/rank:
 50-6-5, honorable mention
Coach: Kari Carnell, eighth season (251-125-28)
League finish: First in Genesee Area Conference Red
Championship history: Has never appeared in an MHSAA Final.
Best wins: 3-0 over honorable mention Kingsley in Quarterfinal, 3-1 over Mt. Morris in District opener, 2-1 over Division 3 No. 6 Unionville-Sebewaing, 2-0 over Division 3 honorable mention Pewamo-Westphalia, 2-0 over Division 3 honorable mention Grand Rapids NorthPointe Christian.
Players to watch: Elizabeth Norris, 5-11 jr. MH/S (837 kills, 86 blocks, 388 digs); Alexa Mort, sr. S (1,533 assists, 72 aces, 341 digs); Ellie Toney, 5-11 fr. MH (301 kills, 92 aces, 417 digs).
Finals forecast: Coming off its third straight Regional title, Corunna has broken through to earn its first Semifinal berth. The Cavaliers have won 10 of their last 11 matches and also taken some strong defeats – the losses this fall came to No. 2 Notre Dame Prep, honorable mention Cadillac, Division 3 No. 3 Schoolcraft, Oxford and New Lothrop. Norris earned all-state honorable mention last season and in Tuesday’s Quarterfinal blew past her sister Meredith’s best kills season of 839 in 2016, when Meredith was named Miss Volleyball.

GRAND RAPIDS CHRISTIAN
Record/rank:
 44-5, No. 1
Coach: Tiffannie Gates, eighth season (378-79)
League finish: First in O-K Gold
Championship history: Has never played in an MHSAA Final.
Best wins: 3-0 over No. 6 Hamilton in Quarterfinal, 3-0 over honorable mention Spring Lake in Regional Final, 3-0 over No. 8 Coopersville in Regional Semifinal, 3-0 (District Final) plus three regular-season sweeps of honorable mention Grand Rapids South Christian, 2-1 over No. 7 Fruitport, 3-2 over Division 1 No. 5 Hudsonville, 2-0, 2-0 and 2-1 over Division 1 No. 10 Portage Central, 2-0 over Division 1 No. 2 Lake Orion, 2-0, 2-1 and 2-0 over Division 1 No. 7 Rockford.
Players to watch: Addie VanderWeide, 6-0 soph. OH (482 kills, .332 hitting %, 351 digs); Maria Bos, 5-9 sr. OH (391 kills, 313 digs); Jordyn Gates, 5-11 jr. S (1,260 assists, .321 hitting %, 368 digs). (Stats include Quarterfinal.)
Finals forecast: Grand Rapids Christian is seeking its first championship in this sport after making the Class A Quarterfinals three times this decade including last season, and reaching the Semifinals most recently in 2015. Gates made the Class A all-state second team last season and VanderWeide made the third team, and they lead a lineup with only two seniors – Bos and 5-11 middle Olivia Nedd (206 kills, .315 hitting percentage). The Eagles have seen most of the best in Divisions 1 and 2, falling this fall only to Mercy (twice), Rockford, Lake Orion and Division 1 No. 3 Mattawan.  

LAKE ODESSA LAKEWOOD
Record/rank:
46-8-2, No. 3
Coach: Cameron Rowland, first season (46-8-2)
League finish: First in Greater Lansing Activities Conference
Championship history: Class B champion 2012, four runner-up finishes.  
Best wins: 3-1 over No. 5 Wixom St. Catherine in Quarterfinal, 3-0 over honorable mention Parma Western in Regional Semifinal, 2-0 over No. 7 Fruitport, 2-0 over No. 8 Coopersville, 2-1 over Division 1 No. 4 Lowell.
Players to watch: Patsy Morris, 5-5 sr. L (692 digs, 365 assists, 108 aces); Aubrey O’Gorman, 6-3 soph. MB (353 kills, .451 hitting %, 140 blocks); Maradith O’Gorman, 6-1 fr. RS/S (452 kills, .393 hitting %, 404 assists, 95 aces, 122 blocks, 300 digs).
Finals forecast: Longtime coach Kellie Rowland retired after leading the Vikings to a third runner-up finish in four seasons last fall. In stepped her son Cameron, who grew up in the program and previously served as a graduate assistant at Western Michigan University. He’s brought the Vikings back for their fifth Semifinal in seven seasons, and with a returning first-team all-stater in Morris and third-teamer in Aubrey O’Gorman. Five players had at least 100 kills entering the week, and sophomore Sophie Duits with 499 assists led three players with at least 365. St. Catherine was the first of six postseason opponents to win a set, and the Vikings are 15-0-1 over their last 16 matches.

PONTIAC NOTRE DAME PREP
Record/rank:
 63-5, No. 2
Coach: Betty Wroubel, 25th season (1,057-221-94)
League finish: Does not play in a league.
Championship history: Three Class B titles (most recent 2017).
Best wins: 3-0 over No. 4 North Branch in Regional Final, 2-0 over honorable mention Corunna, 3-0 over Division 1 No. 6 Bloomfield Hills Marian, 2-0 over Division 1 honorable mention Battle Creek Lakeview, 2-0 over Division 3 No. 2 Bronson.
Players to watch: Maddy Chinn, 6-3 sr. OH (628 kills, .463 hitting %, 134 blocks, 493 digs); Natalie Risi, 5-11 sr. OH (532 kills, .449 hitting %, 178 aces, 444 digs, 147 assists); Aly Borellis, 5-5 fr. S/RS (74 aces, 700 assists). (Stats include Quarterfinal.)
Finals forecast: Notre Dame Prep won its second Class B title in five seasons a year ago, and this week saw Chinn named the Miss Volleyball Award winner – with Risi also among the 10 finalists. They and setter/outside hitter Maria Famularo (597 assists, 435 digs, 276 kills, 97 aces) are the only seniors on the team and three of only five upperclassmen. After taking tough losses early to strong Division 1 teams Clarkston, Marian, Lake Orion, Flushing and Sterling Heights Stevenson, the Fighting Irish have strung together 53 straight wins. Chinn will continue her career at Purdue University and Risi with Ball State, while Famularo will play at Division II Slippery Rock in Pennsylvania.

Division 3

BRONSON
Record/rank:
 56-6, No. 2
Coach: Jean LaClair, 19th season (892-307-75)
League finish: First in Big 8 Conference
Championship history: Four Class C titles (most recent 2017), one runner-up finish.
Best wins: 3-2 (Regional Final) and 2-0 over No. 3 Schoolcraft, 3-0 over No. 9 Centreville in Regional Semifinal, 3-0 (Quarterfinal) and 2-0 over honorable mention Grand Rapids NorthPointe Christian, 2-0 over honorable mention Muskegon Western Michigan Christian, 2-1 over Division 1 honorable mention Battle Creek Lakeview, 3-0 over Division 4 No. 2 Mendon.
Players to watch: Keona Salesman, 6-1 jr. OH (707 kills, .394 hitting %, 114 aces, 525 digs); Kiera Lasky, 5-5 sr. L (662 digs, 92 aces); Ashton Wronikowski, 5-11 sr. MH (392 kills, 109 blocks, 135 aces).
Finals forecast: Bronson won the last three Class C championships and might be the favorite this weekend if not for an early loss to Monroe St. Mary. Lasky made the all-state first team last season and was a Miss Volleyball finalist, while Salesman and Wronikowski also made the Class C first team a year ago and now-senior hitter Jolie Smoker (331 kills) earned honorable mention. Sophomore Meagan Lasky has taken the reigns of the attack with a record book-qualifying 1,640 assists heading into this week. Bronson also has wins over Division 2 honorable mentions Parma Western, Niles and Edwardsburg and Division 4 No. 3 Camden-Frontier and No. 5 Battle Creek St. Philip, with their defeats to St. Mary, Division 1 No. 3 Mattawan, Battle Creek Lakeview (twice), Notre Dame Prep and Ann Arbor Skyline.

MONROE ST. MARY CATHOLIC CENTRAL
Record/rank:
 45-3, No. 1
Coach: Karen O’Brien, fourth season (151-36-3)
League finish: First in Huron League
Championship history: Five MHSAA titles (most recent 2014), three runner-up finishes.
Best wins: 2-0 over No. 2 Bronson, 3-2 over No. 5 Manchester in Quarterfinal, 3-0 (Regional Final) and 2-0 over No. 10 Brighton Charyl Stockwell, 3-0 (District Final) and 2-0 over No. 4 Riverview Gabriel Richard, 2-0 over Division 2 No. 8 Coopersville, 2-0 and 2-1 over Division 1 honorable mention Temperance Bedford.
Players to watch: Mikayla Haut, 5-10 soph. OH (536 kills, .405 hitting %, 95 aces, 71 blocks, 364 digs); Abby Jackson, 5-7 sr. L (548 digs); Maddie Haut, 6-0 sr. MH (244 kills, .477 hitting %, 119 blocks).
Finals forecast: St. Mary is back at the Semifinals for the sixth time in eight years after falling in a Quarterfinal to eventual champion Bronson a year ago. The Kestrels have returning all-state first-teamers Mikayla Haut and Jackson and third-teamer Maddie Haut highlighting a roster with four seniors total but three who start. The third, setter Jessica Long, had a team-high 799 assists entering this week, and 5-8 sophomore Anna Dean (263 kills) is another key hitter. St. Mary also owns wins over Division 4 No. 5 Battle Creek St. Philip, No. 6 Plymouth Christian and Division 2 honorable mention Parma Western, with its losses to Brighton, Dexter and Mattawan.

TRAVERSE CITY ST. FRANCIS
Record/rank:
 34-13, No. 8
Coach: Matt Witczak, first season (34-13)
League finish: First in Lake Michigan Conference
Championship history: Class C runner-up 2012.
Best wins: 3-1 over honorable mention Beal City in Quarterfinal, 3-1 over Rogers City in Regional Semifinal, 2-1 over Division 2 honorable mention Kingsley, 2-0 over Division 4 No. 1 Leland.
Players to watch: Molly Mirabelli, 6-1 sr. OH (408 kills, 129 digs); Brenna Poole, 5-10 sr. M (332 kills, 94 blocks, 136 digs); Hannah Sidorowicz, 5-8 soph. S (812 assists, 74 aces).
Finals forecast: St. Francis won its third Regional title in four seasons and will play in the Semifinals for the first time since 2015. The Gladiators have come on strong with 20 wins over their last 21 matches, including a late victory over Leland after two earlier defeats. Mirabelli made the all-state first team last season and played in the 2015 Semifinal loss to Bronson. Along with Brenna Poole, sophomore Kaylin Poole provides additional hitting with 284 kills and a team-high .350 hitting percentage entering this week. Mirabelli will play collegiately at Miami (Ohio).

UNIONVILLE-SEBEWAING
Record/rank:
 43-4-4, No. 6
Coach: Teresa Rose, 11th season (373-105-46)
League finish: First in Greater Thumb Conference West
Championship history: Has never appeared in an MHSAA Final.
Best wins: 3-2 (Quarterfinal) and 2-0 over Brown City, 2-1 over No. 9 Centreville, 3-0 over honorable mention Harbor Beach in the District Final, 2-0 over honorable mention Pewamo-Westphalia.
Players to watch: Rylee Zimmer, 5-10 sr. MH (782 kills, .384 hitting %, 517 digs, 127 blocks); Nichole Schember, 5-9 sr. S (1,616 assists); Allyson Kemp, 5-10 jr. OH (351 kills). (Stats include Quarterfinal.)
Finals forecast: After falling in a close Quarterfinal a year ago, USA took the next step to return to the Semifinals for the first time since 2014. Zimmer was a Class C all-state second-teamer last season, and she and Schember are the only seniors on this fall’s squad. Both have posted numbers eligible for inclusion in the MHSAA record book, and freshman Megan Gross (252 kills) and sophomore Grace Williamson (279) also are key hitters. The Patriots’ only losses were to larger schools – Grand Blanc (twice), Mason and Corunna. They’ve lost only 22 sets this season, including the eight from those four defeats. Zimmer will continue her career at Saginaw Valley State.

Division 4

CARNEY-NADEAU
Record/rank:
 26-3-1, No. 9
Coach: Steve Kedsch, 17th season (279-196-38)
League finish: First in Skyline Central Conference
Championship history: Has never played in an MHSAA Final.
Best wins: 3-2 over honorable mention Onaway in Quarterfinal, 3-1 (Regional Final) and 3-2 over Munising, 2-0 over No. 10 Rudyard.
Players to watch: Taylor Kedsch, 5-8 soph. OH (216 kills, 62 aces, 239 digs); Talisha McCullough, 5-4 sr. S (364 assists, 207 digs); Layla Blahnik-Thoune, 5-7 sr. S/RS (222 assists, 65 aces, 201 digs).
Finals forecast: Carney-Nadeau has followed up its first Regional title in this sport with its first trip to the Semifinals, after winning its third straight District and second straight league titles earlier this fall. The Wolves only losses were two early to Wisconsin teams and the most recent later to larger Sault Ste. Marie – they’ve lost only 15 sets all season. Senior Ashlyn Hansen and sophomore Liana Blahnik are 5-11 and 5-10, respectively, and provide an effective blocking tandem in the middle, together averaging nearly three blocks per match.

LELAND
Record/rank:
 46-10-1, No. 1
Coach: Laurie Glass, 24th season (956-279-90)
League finish: First in Northwest Conference
Championship history: Five MHSAA titles (most recent 2015), six runner-up finishes.
Best wins: 3-0 and 2-1 over Division 3 No. 8 Traverse City St. Francis, 2-0 over Division 2 honorable mention Cadillac, 3-2 over Division 2 honorable mention Kingsley.
Players to watch: Ella Siddall, 5-5 sr. S (1,019 assists, 80 aces, 229 digs); Allie Martin, 5-7 sr. OH (493 kills, 113 aces, 386 digs); Hanna Elwell, 5-9 sr. OPP (310 kills).
Finals forecast: Leland is back for its fourth Semifinals in five seasons after falling in the Regional a year ago. Siddall is capping a career that has seen her set for the 2015 championship team and 2016 semifinalist, while Martin also was a key contributor in 2015 and Elwell played a big part in 2016. Siddall made the all-state first team last season, while Martin made the second, junior middle/defensive specialist Maddie Grosvenor made the third and senior libero Margie Stowe earned honorable mention. Siddall will play collegiately at DePaul.

MENDON
Record/rank:
 47-6-3, No. 2
Coach: Heather Bowers, first season (47-6-3)
League finish: First in Southwest 10 Conference
Championship history: Three MHSAA titles (most recent 2001).
Best wins: