Edmond Paces Kentucky to Elite Eight Berth, 5-Set Win over BYU

  0 Wendy Mayer | December 08th, 2017 | College - Women's Indoor, News, SEC, WCC

MATCH STATS

  • #4 Kentucky def. #13 BYU 3-2 (20-25, 25-17, 22-25, 25-18, 15-9)
  • Kentucky moves to 29-3; BYU ends the season at 30-3
  • Kentucky advances to the Elite Eight
  • Lexington, Kentucky
  • Box Score

 

Sophomore outside hitter Leah Edmond put down 21 kills and had help from three other double-digit kill efforts en route to a five-set comeback win over BYU and the program’s first ever Elite Eight berth.

Joining Edmond were freshman outside Avery Skinner (20), senior middle Emily Franklin (12) and junior opposite Brooke Morgan (12), while senior middle Kaz Brown added eight kills to join 1,000-kill, 500-block club. Brown also added a team-high nine stuffs in the match, while Franklin and freshman setter Madison Lilley notched seven stuffs apiece. Defensively, Edmond and senior libero Ashley Dusek pulled up 13 digs, while Lilley, junior defensive specialist McKenzie Watson and freshman defensive specialist Gabby Curry chipped in 12 apiece.

For BYU, junior outside Veronica Jones-Perry notched a match-high 24 kills, but hit just .175, while junior outside Lacy Haddock added 12 putaways and senior opposite Cosy Burnett chipped in nine. Freshman middle Kennedy Redding put up a team-leading seven blocks, while sophomore libero Mary Lake (19), junior defensive specialist Sydnie Martindale (15) and junior setter Lyndie Haddock (10) pulled up double-digit dig tallies.

BYU jumped ahead 6-2 in the decisive fifth set, with help from two UK miscues and two Jones-Perry putaways. The Wildcats called timeout and came out of the break with an 8-1 run to go up 10-7. Four Edmond kills and a pair of stuffs by Franklin put UK on top. A BYU timeout and Burnett kill slowed Kentucky momentarily, but kills by Edmond and Franklin and a triple block put UK two points from the match. A McKenna Miller kill kept things going for BYU, but a Franklin putaway gave the Wildcats five match-point tries. Skinner pounded a crosscourt kill to close out the match at 15-9.

Kentucky won every statistical category in the comeback victory: hitting perentage (.317 to .213), kills (75-61), aces (5-3), blocks (16.5-10) and digs (72-61).

BYU built a 16-8 lead in Set 1 behind four Jones-Perry putaways. Kentucky chipped away, eventually pulling within two at 20-18. A 4-0 run, including two Edmond kills started the rally, while three-straight points, including a kill and an ace by Emily Franklin wrapped up the run. The Cougars regained control, capping the set with five of the final seven points, including two Kennedy Redding kills and the final putaway by Jones-Perry.

Kentucky rebounded with a 25-17 Set 2 victory. The Wildcats led by two three times in the early going, last at 9-7, but the Cougars scored three straight to take a 10-9 lead. UK responded with a 5-0 run, including three Edmond putdowns, to go up 14-10, a lead which the team would not relinquish. BYU cut the margin to two twice, last at 17-15, but it was nearly all Kentucky after that. Brooke Morgan downed two kills to push the lead to 20-15. Two Skinner kills and two stuffs by Brown wrapped up the win.

After seven ties, last at 11-all, Kentucky broke away with a 6-2 run, to go up 17-13. Five different players notched kills in the stretch. Down 19-16, BYU made a comeback, rallying to take a 22-21 lead. Two kills each from Lacy Haddock and Cosy Burnett and aces by Sydnie Martindale and Haddock put the Cougars on top. An Edmond kill tied it up at 22. A Jones-Perry kill and two Wildcat errors, one of which was challenged, sealed the Cougar’s 25-22 win.

Kentucky cruised to a 7-2 lead in Set 4 with help from two Brown blocks and two Edmond putaways. BYU wasn’t content to let the Wildcats run away with it, instead scoring five of the next six to cut the margin to one at 8-7. Jones-Perry notched two kills and the Cougars also were gifted two UK miscues. Kentucky went up five at 12-7 with two BYU miscues and a kill and a block by Franklin, and pushed ahead by seven at 20-13 with two kills by Brooke Morgan and two by Skinner. The Cougars narrowed the gap to four at 20-16, but could not break through. Two Morgan putaways and one by Skinner set up the final point, which came on a stuff by Brown and Lilley.

 

PRESS RELEASES

Courtesy: Kentucky Athletics

Powered by a masterful 14-4 run in the decisive fifth set the sixth-ranked Kentucky volleyball team marched on to the Elite Eight behind a 3-2 (20-25, 25-17, 22-25, 25-18, 15-9) win over No. 7 BYU in front of 3,219 fans in Memorial Coliseum on Friday. Kentucky trailed 2-1 in the match and then 5-1 in the deciding fifth frame before mounting comebacks to earn the win and a bit of history.

For the first time in program annals, UK has now won three matches in a single tournament. It also marks the first appearance in the Regional Finals under 13th-year head coach Craig Skinner. With the win, the 2017 senior class earned its 100th career victory and more importantly lives to see another day.

“For us to get through that match, I have to credit two groups of people for toughness,” head coach Craig Skinner said.  “One, obviously, is our team for battling back the way that they did in a couple different situations, being down 2-1 and then going on a 13-3 or 14-4 run in the fifth. Also our fans for being tough enough to get here at noon, parking, figuring out a way to get here and support us and be behind us the entire time. That takes a lot of energy, effort, and commitment from our fans. I’m just really proud to be representing Kentucky when people come like that.”

Kentucky improved to 29-3 overall on the season, while BYU fell to 30-3 on the year. UK will play the winner of the Nebraska-Colorado match at 4 p.m. ET in Memorial Coliseum on Saturday. The match will also air live on ESPNU. For ticket and parking information, please visit the tournament central site.

In the decisive fifth frame, BYU jumped out to a quick 2-0 lead before freshman Avery Skinner put the Cats on the board with a kill. The Cougars continued the run and pushed the lead to 5-1, prompting a timeout by Kentucky. Following the break, senior Kaz Brown and freshman Madison Lilley teamed up for a much-needed block. UK continued to fight and pulled to within one at 6-5 behind consecutive kills from sophomore Leah Edmond forcing the Cougars into a timeout.

BYU snapped the spurt by the Cats out of the timeout, but Edmond came right back with another kill and then the Cougars committed an erroneous attack to tie thing at 7-7. Edmond and senior Emily Franklin combined for a Big Blue block and the Wildcats took an 8-7 edge into the switching of sides.

Franklin’s touch shot lifted the home team to a two-point advantage. After BYU was unable to win the coach’s challenge, Edmond came up with another crowd-pleasing kill to increase the lead to 10-7. The Cougars attempted to suppress the momentum by taking their final timeout.

The Cougars managed just that with a kill of its own. Kentucky fired right back with back-to-back kills from Edmond and Franklin making it 12-8. A triple block from the team of junior Brooke Morgan, Franklin and Lilley extended the stretch by the Cats. Franklin gave Kentucky match point at 14-9 when she utilized the block to her advantage. Skinner’s 20th kill of the night would clinch the win on the next play.

Although a cliché, it really was a total team effort.

“I think the biggest thing was relax and play how we know we can play,” Avery Skinner said. “You can’t really do anything extra in the moment; you just have to trust your training. I think another big thing is we’re playing for a higher purpose. Our other teammate who can’t be with us, we all really want to play well for her and also just to get the win.”

Edmond and Skinner combined to form a 1-2 punch on the outside with 21 and 20 kills, respectively. Edmond has notched 20 or more kills in consecutive NCAA matches, while Skinner’s total marked a new career high. She’s boasted 14 or more kills in all three NCAA Tournament appearances. Edmond also contributed 13 digs, while Skinner added four blocks. It is the eighth double-double of the season for Edmond, while Skinner’s block total matched a career high.

Freshman setter Madison Lilley dished out 63 assists, the third time she has achieved the feat this season. She’s the only player in program history during the 25-point rally scoring era to have 60 or more assists in at least three career matches. Lilley added 12 digs and a career-high seven blocks. She directed UK’s offense to the tune of 75 kills and a .317 attacking clip, including 10 kills on a .368 percentage in the final stanza.

Morgan posted a season-high 12 kills, just one shy of matching her career-high total. She did her damage on a sizzling .529 attacking percentage and added a pair of blocks.

Franklin and Brown teamed up for 20 kills and were in on all 16 of UK’s blocks in the match. Franklin had 12 kills on a .500 hitting clip while adding seven blocks. Brown had nine rejections and eight hammers. Brown has logged nine blocks in back-to-back matches – which is a season-high mark. Brown also reached 1,000 kills for a career during the third set of the match.

Defensively, five players reached double digits in the digs’ column. Edmond and senior Ashley Dusek both had team highs in the category with 13. Lilley, junior McKenzie Watson, Lilley and freshman Gabby Curry all had 12. In 13 NCAA appearances under Skinner, he’s never directed a defensive effort in which five different players had 10 or more digs until today’s win.

Three other Wildcats posted a dig in the win. Junior Merideth Jewell came up with four digs, while Franklin matched that total. Morgan had two scoops of her own.

“She is always the first person in the huddle giving us information and I think she is really aware of what is going on,” Edmond said, on Jewell. “I think that’s a big reason why she makes such an impact when she comes in because she knows everything that is going on and she comes in and does her job. It’s really amazing to have a player like that.”

SET RECAPS

Set One
Skinner laced a kill off the block to begin the match, but BYU earned the point right back benefiting from a UK service error. From there the teams exchanged points until BYU shook loose for three straight and a 5-2 lead. Edmond snapped the spurt with her first kill of the match. The Cougars were able to stretch their lead to five at 9-4. Kentucky made a run behind a kill from Morgan and a block from Skinner and Brown to get to within three at 10-7. BYU responded with a run of its own to earn a 12-7 lead, forcing UK into a timeout. The run extended following the break and the visitors were able to take their largest lead of the set at 14-7, before Skinner’s second kill of the day ended the threat. BYU’s lead stretched to eight at 16-8, and UK opted for another timeout. A kill from Edmond, a block from the Lilley-Franklin duo, followed by an ace from Dusek and another kill from Edmond ignited the crowd and enabled Kentucky to pull to within four at 16-12. BYU scored two-consecutive points to re-earn a comfortable cushion. Franklin then helped push another Kentucky run with a kill and then she combined with Morgan for a block to make the score 19-15 in favor of BYU. The Cougars chose to take a timeout. An ace from Franklin, followed by a huge dig from UK’s middle blocker capped by a kill from Morgan enabled UK to get to within two at 20-18. BYU responded with a 2-0 run of its own and eventually earned a 25-20 win to take a 1-0 lead in the match.

Set Two
BYU scored the second set’s first point, but UK answered with a sizzling kill from Skinner. Brown and Lilley then teamed up for a block and UK earned a lead at 2-1. Play seesawed until Franklin had consecutive kills for a 5-3 lead for the Cats. The visitors fired right back and tied things at five before Edmond was able to tool the block and quell the run. The teams traded points once again until Skinner scored two straight off kills for another two-point advantage for the home team at 8-6. The Cougars clawed back and eventually earned a 10-9 edge. UK’s answer was another kill from Skinner and that sparked another run and another two-point lead at 12-10. Edmond tooled the block after a magnificent dig from Watson to push the lead to three, and then followed with another kill off BYU’s hands. A kill from Brown gave UK a 15-11 lead at the media timeout. BYU pulled to within two on two occasions and both times the Cats were able to fend off the threat. Franklin had an ace and then Morgan put down her sixth kill of the match for a 20-15 Kentucky advantage. After a BYU timeout, the visitors strung together two straight – but Skinner ended that spurt with back-to-back explosive hammers and a 22-17 Kentucky lead. Following another BYU timeout, Brown and Lilley teamed up for a rejection to add to UK’s lead. Lilley then won a joust at the net to set up set point. Brown and Skinner’s block lifted Kentucky to a 25-17 second set win to even the match at 1-1.

Set Three
BYU jumped out to a 1-0 lead, but UK fired back with a kill from Skinner. The Cougars scored the next two before a one-handed dig from Curry led to an Edmond kill, followed by an ace from Dusek to knot the score at three apiece. Lilley and Franklin teamed up for a block to extend UK’s run. The Wildcats eventually earned a two-point edge at 6-4 off another crafty kill from Edmond, but BYU exerted a run of its own to tie it at six. Morgan laced a kill cross-court to snap the spurt. BYU eventually knotted it up at nine apiece, but Brown and Skinner turned back a BYU attack for another Big Blue block to spell the run. From there the teams traded points until Brown laid down her 1,000th career kill for a 12-11 Kentucky lead. Another kill from Edmond lifted the Cats to a 15-12 edge at the media timeout. Back-to-back kills from Morgan and Skinner pushed the lead to four at 17-13 and BYU opted for a timeout. Following the break, BYU was able to pull back to within two on two occasions but both times the Wildcats had an answer. Eventually the Cougars inched back to within one at 19-18 and Kentucky chose to take a timeout. Out of the timeout, Brown converted off the slide to lift UK to a multi-point advantage. From there, however, BYU continued to chip at the lead and eventually earned a one-point edge off of an ace at 22-21. Kentucky used its final timeout. Edmond answered out of the break with her 13th kill of the match to tie the score yet again. BYU would promptly score the next three points for a 25-22 lead and a 2-1 edge in the match.

Set Four
Brown opened the scoring with a solo rejection followed by a kill to get UK on the board first. After an extended rally it was Brown and Lilley who teamed up for a massive block to increase the lead to 3-0. Consecutive kills from Edmond gave the home team a 6-2 advantage and BYU opted for an early timeout. Following the timeout, UK’s lead stretched to five following a BYU miscue. The Cougars rallied back to within one on two occasions with Kentucky coming up with an answer in both instances. A Franklin solo block enabled UK to recapture a three-point lead at 10-7. Consecutive errors by BYU increased Kentucky’s lead back to five at 12-7. After Morgan reached double-figures in the kills’ column for the second time this season to stretch UK’s lead to six at 14-8, BYU chose to take its final timeout. Kentucky maintained the extensive advantage and eventually increased it to seven at 20-13 after Edmond tooled the block. BYU rallied for a 3-0 run to pull to within four at 20-16 and Kentucky chose to take a timeout to regroup. Following the timeout, BYU committed a service error and then Morgan came up with another kill. The Cats would not let BYU get any closer and the Blue and White forced a decisive fifth frame behind a 25-18 fourth-set win with Brown and Lilley teaming up for the block and the winning point.

 

Courtesy: BYU Athletics

Despite 24 kills from Veronica Jones-Perry, No. 13 seed BYU women’s volleyball fell short to No. 4 seed Kentucky in five sets (20-25, 25-17, 22-25, 25-18, 15-9) Friday afternoon at Memorial Coliseum in the regional semifinals of the NCAA tournament.

“I’m very proud of the match our team played today,” BYU head coach Heather Olmstead said. “All year we’ve challenged them to work hard to see how good we could be, and we saw that we are a really good team. Congratulations to Kentucky on a great match.”

Jones-Perry led the Cougars with 24 kills and eight digs. Lyndie Haddock set the team with a season-high 52 assists to go with 10 digs for a double-double while Mary Lake had 19 digs. Kennedy Redding contributed seven blocks and Sydnie Martindale collected a career-high 15 digs. Lacy Haddock added a season-high 12 kills while Cosy Burnett and Danelle Stetler put up nine and seven kills, respectively.

Back-to-back kills from Jones-Perry helped BYU (30-3) to a 5-1 lead in the decisive fifth set against Kentucky (29-3). The Wildcats stormed back with an 8-1 run to take a 10-7 advantage. The Cougars struggled to find an offensive rhythm as Kentucky then took the set and match 15-9.

BYU got off to a 7-3 lead early in the first set against Kentucky after a Lyndie Haddock solo block capped off a 6-1 run. The Cougars continued to control the set after a Jones-Perry kill made it 12-7, forcing a Wildcat timeout. BYU went on a 4-1 run to take a 16-8 lead out of the break, but Kentucky responded with a 4-0 rally to get back in the set, trailing 16-12. The Wildcats got within a pair after a kill, down 20-18, but the Cougars rallied to take the set 25-20 on another Jones-Perry kill.

The two teams started off evenly in the second set, as a Burnett kill and McKenna Miller and Redding block evened the score at 5-5. With BYU trailing by two, three-straight points gave the Cougars a 10-9 advantage. Kentucky then rattled off five-consecutive points to go ahead 14-10. BYU cut the lead to two (16-14) on consecutive kills by Stetler, but the Wildcats then surged ahead 20-15 before eventually taking the set 25-17.

A kill from Burnett tied the score at 4-4 and a Kentucky attack error knotted things up again at 9-all in the third set. The score stayed close until three-straight Wildcat points gave them a 14-11 edge. The Cougars cut the lead back to two on four occasions before a Martindale ace brought BYU within a point, down 19-18. Back-to-back kills from Burnett made it 21-all, and a Kentucky error gave the Cougars set point. BYU then took the set 25-22 from another error by the Wildcats.

Kentucky got off to a strong start in the fourth set, going up 3-0 after winning a lengthy rally and then 6-2, forcing a Cougar timeout. A 5-1 BYU run ensued, capped off by a Jones-Perry kill, to get the Cougars back within a point, down 8-7. The Wildcats capitalized on several BYU errors to go on a 6-1 streak, going back up by six at 14-8. The two teams traded points from there until a 3-0 Cougar rally kept BYU within four, down 20-16. The run proved too late as Kentucky won the set 25-18 on a block, sending the match to the decisive fifth set.

Facing the Wildcats, the Cougars advanced to their sixth-straight regional semifinals of the NCAA tournament. BYU loses just three seniors from next year’s squad.

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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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