Argentina Advances Despite Loss to Japan; Italy Moves to 5-0 in Pool A

  0 Wendy Mayer | September 18th, 2018 | International Volleyball, News, Previews & Recaps

2018 FIVB Men’s World Championships – Preliminary Pool A

  • Florence, Italy
  • Sept. 12-18, 2018
  • Teams: #4 Italy, #7 Argentina, #12 Japan, #15 Belgium, #23 Slovenia, Dominican Republic

Japan defeated Argentina in five sets, but missed out on a spot in the second round on point totals (6-5) to the Argentines. Japan got the win that it needed, but failed to garner the three points it needed to get into the next round, trailing Argentina 6-5 in points.

The day’s other match planted Italy firmly atop the group at 5-0 as the host nation edged Slovenia in four sets after dropping the opener.

Japan def. Argentina 3-2 (26-24, 20-25, 30-32, 25-20, 15-13)

“I am happy because we reached our goal even if we lost the match,” Argentine top scorer Facundo Conte said. “Japan is very strong when it comes to their defense game and this was evident today. It will be very tough in Bulgaria, however we will try to achieve something more in this tournament.”

Conte threw down 33 points and Japan’s Yuji Nishida answered with 30 scores of his own in the two hour and 20 minutes battle. In the end, Japan boasted a two-point advantage in the match care of 23 Argentine errors (to 21 of its own).

Nishida had help from 21 points by Masahiro Yanagida, 16 from Tatsuya Fukuzawa and 11 from Akihiro Yamauchi in the victory. Nishida downed 27 kills, while Yanagida added 16 and Fukuzawa chipped in 14 putaways. Yanagida also came through  with four aces.

Conte managed a team-best 30 kills, two aces and a block. Sebastian Sole (14), Jose Gonzalez (11) and Christian Poglajen (9) rounded out the top scoring. Sole and Gonzalez turned in 12 and 10 kills respectively, while Poglajen did his scoring on nine putaways. Pablo Crer put up a team-best three blocks among five points.

Argentina boasted an 11-7 lead in blocks, countered by Japan’s 9-5 edge in aces. The difference came in the errors (23-21) as both teams managed 77 kills in the match.

Argentina led 8-5 and after giving up the advantage at 12-11 rallied to go ahead 18-16 in Set 1. Japan cut the margin to one at 20-19 and carried the momentum to a 26-24 win.

Conte was a perfect 7-for-7 in kills in Set 2, lifting Argentina to one of its two needed victories at 25-20.

Japan led early in Set 3 before losing libero Taichiro Koga to a neck injury midway through the stanza as he flew over the LED boards. Argentina had the first try at the set but missed four opportunities, despite 12 Conte scores in the stanza. Japan earned two chances of its own, but couldn’t convert either. Poglajen finally ended the set at 32-30 to punch Argentina’s ticket to the next round.

It was a back and forth battle in Set 4 until Yanagida served up four points, including two aces, to force the decisive fifth set.

Japan led Set 5 at 9-7, only to see Argentina charge ahead at 12-10 on another Conte putdown. Yuki Ishikawa tacked on two points and Yanagida added an ace to set up a final block by Fukuzawa for the win.

“We played very well as a team, and it is sad we cannot go to the next round; it was anyway good to win, it is something we will take on for next year,” Nishida said.

Italy def. Slovenia 3-1 (23-25, 25-19, 25-13, 25-18)

“I am happy we finished Pool A undefeated which is fundamental for the rest of the tournament; we were good to play in an appropriate way at the different stages of the game,” Italian captain Ivan Zaytsev said. “Even in the first set when they played at a very high level, we did not get nervous and later we improved the quality of our performance.”

Italy was one better than Slovenia in every way, outdoing its foes in kills (46-39), blocks (13-8) and aces (5-3) and earning 34 points on miscues (to 25 of its own).

Zaytsev piled up 18 points, including team best tallies in sets 1, 2 and 4, and made up of 14 kills, three blocks and an ace. Osmany Juantorena (13), Daniele Mazzone (11) and Simone Anzani (11) also turned in double-digit point totals. Anzani put up a team-leading six blocks, while Mazone added three to go with seven putaways. Juantorena served up two of the team’s five aces and notched 11 kills. Gabriele Maruotti took over for Filippo Lanza in Set 3 and went on to score six points, all on kills.

Mitch Gasparini posted six points in the Set 1 win and continued on to a 14 point tally (11 kills, two blocks, 1 ace). Tine Urnaut (11) and Klemen Cebulj (10) also scored in double figures. Jan Kozamernik added five points with a team-best three blocks and an ace.

Slovenia grabbed a two-point edge at 20-18 in Set 1 and two Pajnek putaways made it 23-21. Kills by Sket and Cebulj sealed the victory at 25-23.

Juantorena came through for Italy in the end of Set 2 and Anzani chipped in a block and a kill to knot the match at a set apiece at 25-19.

Italy jumped out to an 8-3 lead in Set 3 as Maroutti came in. The advantage stood at eight points at 18-10 and the team carried on from there to a 25-13 victory. A Mazzone ace and two blocks and a kill by Anzani capped the win. The Italians scored 11 points on kills, two on blocks and two on aces in the victory.

Set 4 was a one-point game at 12-11, but Italy was too much in the end, earning a match-point try off Zaytsev’s hand and clinching a perfect mark with a Anzani tip shot.

“It was a great experience to play in this sports hall with so many passionate fans,” Urnaut said. “Apart from the first set, today we did not perform very well when we had a few chances to play with good reception. And it was hard to develop a good side-out with the ball often far from the net. Italy deserved the victory.”

Matches Pts Sets Points
Rank Team W L W L Ratio W L Ratio
1  Italy 5 0 15 15 2 7.500 423 326 1.298
2  Belgium 3 2 10 11 8 1.375 419 394 1.063
3  Slovenia 3 2 9 12 10 1.200 479 463 1.035
4  Argentina 2 3 6 10 11 0.909 475 469 1.013
5  Japan 2 3 5 8 11 0.727 414 427 0.970
6  Dominican Republic 0 5 0 1 15 0.067 267 398 0.671
Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
9 Sep 19:30 Italy  3–0  Japan 25–20 25–21 25–23 75–64 P2 Report
12 Sep 17:00 Dominican Republic  1–3  Slovenia 25–22 13–25 13–25 17–25 68–97 P2 Report
12 Sep 20:30 Belgium  3–1  Argentina 25–19 25–19 22–25 25–19 97–82 P2 Report
13 Sep 17:00 Dominican Republic  0–3  Japan 20–25 16–25 16–25 52–75 P2 Report
13 Sep 21:15 Italy  3–0  Belgium 25–20 25–17 25–16 75–53 P2 Report
14 Sep 17:00 Japan  1–3  Slovenia 20–25 25–22 20–25 13–25 78–97 P2 Report
14 Sep 20:30 Argentina  3–0  Dominican Republic 26–24 25–15 25–15 76–54 P2 Report
15 Sep 17:00 Belgium  2–3  Slovenia 25–22 25–21 19–25 23–25 13–15 105–108 P2 Report
15 Sep 21:15 Italy  3–1  Argentina 22–25 25–15 25–23 28–26 100–89 P2 Report
16 Sep 17:00 Japan  1–3  Belgium 25–14 23–25 14–25 19–25 81–89 P2 Report
16 Sep 21:15 Dominican Republic  0–3  Italy 12–25 18–25 15–25 45–75 P2 Report
17 Sep 17:00 Belgium  3–0  Dominican Republic 25–18 25–13 25–17 75–48 P2 Report
17 Sep 20:30 Argentina  3–2  Slovenia 25–18 22–25 27–29 25–17 15–13 114–102 P2 Report
18 Sep 17:00 Japan  3–2  Argentina 26–24 20–25 30–32 25–20 15–13 116–114 P2 Report
18 Sep 21:15 Italy  3–1  Slovenia 23–25 25–19 25–13 25–18 98–75 P2 Report

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About Wendy Mayer

Wendy Mayer

Wendy Mayer has worked in athletics media relations for the last 20 years. The Northwest Missouri State alumna is currently senior writer for Volleymob.com after spending the last 15 years with Purdue athletics.

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