Hawaii–Hilo Vulcans women's volleyball


The Hawaii–Hilo Vulcans women's volleyball team is the intercollegiate women's volleyball team of the University of Hawaii at Hilo. One of the original "traditionals" in the world of small schools volleyball, the Vulcans started out as National Runners Up right out of the gates in 1978. The 1978 AIAW Div.II team was led by Cheryl Ching, Kawehi Ka'a'a, Vetoann Baker and Lyndell Lindsey. Coach Sharon Peterson was in fact coach back then, but she had been preceded by Coach Mike Wilton for partial foundations in some of 1977. In June 2018, Manu-Olevao's became the able majority, two, assistants.
In the first week of December, in 1979, UHH won Hawai'i its first ever National Championship of volleyball. Later that evening, Hawaii Rainbow Wahine volleyball would also win a national title for large national colleges. All-American Cheryl Ching would go on to win the Honda-Broderick Cup in 1980, moreover, the first in the 50th State to do so. The program as a matter of circumstance would go from AIAW Division II to NAIA powers in 1981. Hilo is still the only multi-Champion, multi-Divisional program to win simultaneous collegiate championships in a single year.

Head coaching

Throughout Coach Peterson's tenure, the Vuls as a sampling of series records would go: 2–0 against the Washington Huskies, 3–1 against the BYU Cougars, 2–2 with Minnesota, 0–1 against the Stanford Cardinal and, further, were solidly able to compete with a 1978, #4 ranked Pepperdine Waves WVB team touring the Hawaiian Islands.

History

From 1981–1984, UH Hilo was the first USA college team to win four consecutive national titles, regardless of divisional league.
In 1988 the program's zenith topped out with a dominant NAIA National Championship season. Hawai'i small schools' glory was epitomized with a starting six, of seven, being awarded All-American certificates. Florence Alo, Jessica Strickland, Debra Namohala, Edna Togiai, Hae Ja Kim and Sheila Scott who would, the latter, complete this list.
In 1993, runners-up UHH would lose its final match of the NAIA in the National Championship game.
In 1994, UH Hilo would once again return to the NCAA Division II league.
From 2007–present, one Hillary Hurley recorded: PacWest/AVCA Pacific Region '07 F.O.Y.; 2010 PacWest P.O.Y., as well as being a 1st Team all-PWC selection. She'd continued on professionally into the Puerto Rican League as an initial athlete, into the European continent ; she'd landed at Club NUC of Switzerland. Currently she's in Expressway Corporation.
UHH moreover, post 2010-Ramsey's graduation, circumstantially of the Pacific Northwest, they'd also field participation in the Sound Premier PVL Team.
They went a winning 15–7 in the 2011–12 school's calendar year; a, one, Marley Strand-Nicolaisen, the Ka'u High School junior, recruited from Naalehu, HI also. The mid-2010s attempts to build momentum with new coaching staff.

Short-list of All Americans

Edie Manzano: Ended her collegiate career in 1982 as the league's MVP. Was the 1983 small-schools, and UHH's second, nominee for the Honda-Broderick Cup.
Alofa Tagataese : Three-time First Team all-American. Could hit a.861 clip-percentage. 1994 inductee into the UHH Vulcans' Hall of Fame. Assistant coach in 2006.
Nalani Spencer-Viveiros: 5x National Champion. Three-time 1st Team All-American.
Cora Caparida-Schnackenberg: c/o 1986-87, when she became a SR 1st Team All-American. Purposed for The Friendly Isle of Moloka'i as a politician, it is her original home. The Schnackenberg's roots, in Santa Barbara, CA, are with STIHL Tools-agricultural & gardening power equipment.
Laurie Kemp : Two-time All American. Hawaiian professional on Beach Circuit. Vulcans H o F, 2003. Forever Barefoot in Kailua and Lahaina.
Rosa Torres: Peru national team member, 1994 Pac West Conference co-POY, starting setter on Hawai'i Waves professional WVB team.
Tanya Fuamatu : 1993 NAIA P.O.Y., 1995 AVCA Div.II 1st Team All-American, 2001 Athletics H o F inductee, AVP Professional
Charlene Kahuanui-Christenson: Three-time National Champion; being incorporated at middle blocker, she'd earned 1st Team all-American honors. She is the mother of Olympic medalist, and near top of the world's best, Micah Christenson.