BEACH VOLLEYBALL
'New' AVP Tackles Some Old Problems
By MIKE BRESNAHAN, TIMES STAFF WRITER
05/23/02
To know the "new" AVP is to know this: Karch Kiraly and
Sinjin Smith, longtime adversaries, are actually making nice. They
will co-host a weekly radio show this summer ... without a glass partition
separating them.
With the glory days of the Assn. of Volleyball Professionals
fading, its players and relatively new management are aware that a
turnaround is needed for the tour to survive, taking whatever means
necessary, even if it means burying the hatchet in the sand.
The AVP lost more than $1 million last year but it appears
to be heading toward better days, certainly an improvement over the
downcast years of the late 1990s, when AVP management made poor decisions,
overpaid its players and ultimately filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
in November 1998. Commissioner Leonard Armato, a beach player in the
mid-1970s and the former agent for Shaquille O'Neal, plucked the tour
last May from Spencer Trask Ventures Inc., a venture-capital firm in
New York City that gladly ditched the foundering enterprise.
"We picked it up [in the] ER last year," Armato said. "We
had to resuscitate a dying body. It was survival."
It remains to be seen whether the AVP recovery is complete.
The AVP kicks off its seven-stop tour Friday with the Huntington
Beach Open.
On the plus side, the AVP is back on NBC for the first time
since 1997, with live coverage of the Manhattan Beach and Chicago
tournaments in August.
However, the AVP is not being paid broadcast rights fees
by NBC, which will lose the NBA after this season and this summer is
conducting an audition of sorts for lesser-known sports, including
arena football.
Regardless, Armato hopes that the national exposure will
pay off. Last year, AVP tournaments were shown solely tape-delayed
on Fox Sports Net, usually three or four weeks after actual tournament
dates.
"Once we set ourselves and our credibility, we have a place
at NBC where we can grow," Armato said. "There's certainly the opportunity
for us if we perform well."
But who will step forward and grow with the AVP?
Smith retired last year at 44. Kiraly, 41, was sidelined
most of last season because of shoulder and Achilles' tendon injuries,
and is a year or two away from retirement.
The Magic Johnson and Larry Bird of the sand, Smith and
Kiraly popularized beach volleyball with their rivalry in the late
1980s and much of the 1990s. It is unclear who will ultimately replace
them: Parity was a trend last year, with few teams winning consistently.
"I don't know if it's clear right now who the next guys
are," said Kiraly, who has won a record 142 tournaments, three more
than Smith. "It's hard to catch peoples' attention if there are different
teams winning every time."
Stein Metzger and Kevin Wong, former teammates at UCLA,
appear to have an edge on the rest of the field. The duo won the final
two tournaments last season--Santa Barbara and Manhattan Beach--and
could become the next dominant team.
"That's what we're out to battle for," Wong said. "Who are
the next kings of the beach? Who are the next stars of our sport? There's
a vacuum there."
There is also some lingering disharmony over which rules
to play by.
One of Armato's first acts was to conform to the rules set
by the sport's international governing body, the FIVB, an action that
irritated some old-school players.
For a second consecutive season, AVP matches will be rally-scored,
with a point awarded on every serve. The court will again be smaller
(about 700 square feet compared to 900 square feet) and the ball will
remain slightly larger.
Though the format better prepares players for Olympic rules,
it's not exactly the side-out, play-until-the-sun-goes-down fun preferred
by older players.
"We're not always sure these changes are for the better,
but we're doing it so we can all be on the same page," Kiraly said.
On the women's side, Holly McPeak and Elaine Youngs have
formed what many expect to be a dominant team.
McPeak and Youngs, two of the top players, were almost teammates
at UCLA--McPeak transferred from California for her senior season
in 1990, but Youngs, a junior at the time, sat out the season because
of a knee injury.
They'll finally get a chance to play together, the result
of a phone call from Youngs to McPeak during the off-season.
"It's nice to be on the same side of the net with her after
competing against her all these years," McPeak said.
The Facts
Who The Assn. of Volleyball Professionals What: The Huntington
Beach Open When: Friday-Sunday Where: South side of the Huntington
Beach pier