Huntington Beach Independent
HUNTINGTON BEACH
A net gain
By Mike Sciacca
World class volleyball hits Surf City this weekend with Huntington
Beach Open, continuing relationship between the Assn. of Volleyball
Professionals and the city.
When you pair a city that is knowledgeable about a sport
such as beach volleyball, with a company that works hard at promoting
and preserving the legacy of the sport, the match can translate to a
strong and lasting marriage.
The union between the city of Huntington Beach and the Assn.
of Volleyball Professionals has been just that. The two celebrate
their fourth anniversary this Memorial Day weekend with the staging
of the Huntington Beach Open.
The three-day event, which opens on Friday with qualifying
round play at the pier, will feature 48 teams featuring the world's
top volleyball athletes. They will compete for their share of more
than $1 million in AVP tour prize money. Some of the top players competing
in men's and women's tournaments include 2000 Olympic gold medalists
Eric Fonoimoana and Dain Blanton, three-time Olympic gold medalist
and volleyball legend Karch Kiraly, 2000 Olympian and top men's newcomer
George Roumain, 2001 "King of the Beach" Kevin Wong, top-ranked and all-time
women's money winner Holly McPeak, and top-ranked women's player, Elaine
Youngs.Katie and Tracy Lindquist, both Ocean View High School graduates,
will be competing in the women's event.The Huntington Beach Open is the
first of seven stops on the 2002 AVP tour that will touch down in such
places as Hermosa Beach, Santa Barbara, Belmar, N.J., Manhattan Beach, Chicago,
and Las Vegas.
"Huntington Beach is a great location to kickoff the 2002
AVP season," said Leonard Armato, who co-founded the AVP tour in 1983
with the winningest player in beach volleyball history, Sinjin Smith.
"There will be a terrific built-in crowd over the Memorial Day weekend
and the fans in Huntington Beach are very knowledgeable about the sport,"
Armato said.
Huntington Beach previously held a professional men's tournament
in 1975 and professional women's tournaments in 1989 as well as on
seven other occasions in the 1990s.The AVP, which only offered a men's
tour beginning in 1983, added the city to its tour schedule in 1999 and
has been stopping in Surf City ever since.This year will mark the second
season that the AVP tour will incorporate both a men's and women's tournament.
Previously, the women played on the Women's Professional Tour.
The city also will be put in the spotlight through the AVP's
television partnership with Fox Sports Net and Oxygen Television.
Six years ago the city was reluctant to have the AVP come
to town, said Steve Seim, marine safety specialist for the city. One
of the tour's main sponsors, he said, was with a beer company."The city
held back at first because of the connection between an alcohol sponsor
and the tour," said Seim, who is a member of the city's special events
committee. "But once it was brought to the city's attention that we were
missing out on some opportunities by not having the AVP make a stop in
Huntington Beach, we thought about it again."In February of 1995 the City
Council voted in favor of the AVP coming to town, but it was delayed from
doing so because of major construction taking place around the pier.Once
the Pier Plaza project was completed and Duke's and Chimayo's restaurants
were in place, the deal was done."The AVP is committed to Huntington Beach
and running a safe, family-oriented event," Seim said. "The pier is
a great venue for this event. You can watch the competition from above,
on the pier, or at ground level. This is such a huge volleyball city,
and the great thing about this event is that it's free."
This year beer will be sold at the event for the first time,
Seim said, but in a controlled environment that he termed a "VIP area."
"If it works out fine, then beer could be sold at future
tour stops here," he said. The AVP had gone into bankruptcy in 1998
but last year, after more than 10 years away from managing the AVP
tour, Armato regained control of the AVP and assembled a new management
team.There was a redirection of the tour's vision.Armato -- a West
Coast sports agent who has worked with the likes of the Lakers' Shaquille
O'Neal -- and his crew have been working hard to bring the AVP visibility
and popularity.
"This is an amazing opportunity for beach volleyball fans
to see their favorite teams -- both men and women, competing at the
same venue," he said of the Huntington Beach Open."We are optimistic
that we will have a great crowd on hand this weekend and our future with
this city looks bright."