Plummer Pounds 22 Kills in #1 Stanford’s Rebound Sweep of Texas A&M

  0 Wendy Mayer | September 03rd, 2017 | College - Women's Indoor, News, Pac 12, SEC

MATCH STATS

  • #1 Stanford def. Texas A&M 3-0 (25-17, 25-20, 25-17)
  • Stanford moves to 4-1; Texas A&M falls to 2-2
  • College Station, Texas
  • Attendance: 1,503
  • Box Score

Sophomore outside hitter Kathryn Plummer was a one-woman wrecking crew, nearly single handedly lifting No. 1 Stanford to a sweep of Texas A&M Sunday morning. Plummer downed 22 kills of the team’s 40,  and hit at  .409 clip, scoring 22.5 of the team’s 56 points in the match.

The Cardinal bested the Aggies in every statistical category, outhitting them .272 to .089, while topping the team in kills (40-30), aces (5-4) and blocks (11-7).

Sophomore setter Jenna Gray added six kills, while freshman outside Meghan McClure chipped in five putaways. Junior middle blocker Tami Alade managed a team-best six blocks, while sophomore middle Audriana Fitzmorris put up five stuffs. Sophomore libero Morgan Hentz paced the team defensively with 12 digs, followed by McClure (10).

Sophomore outside Hollann Hans was the lone Aggie with double-digit kills, downing 12, but hitting at just a .057 clip due to 10 errors. Freshman setter Camille Conner followed with seven kills, a team-leading .400 hitting percentage, three aces and seven digs. Freshman middle Makena Patterson put up a team-best four blocks, while senior libero Amy Nettles held down the defense with 14 digs.

Texas A&M scored four of the first five points in the match, incluidng two Hans putaways. Stanford countered with a 8-3 run of its own to turn the early deficit into a 9-7 lead. Plummer had four kills in the stretch, while McClure chipped in a kill and an ace. The Aggies regained the lead at 12-11 as Hans added two more kills. The Cardinal responded with a 14-5 run to close out the set. Seven Texas A&M errors aided the Stanford effort, while Plummer and McClure chipped in three and two kills respectively.

Stanford carried the momentum into Set 2, racing out to a 9-3 advantage. Four Plummer kills buoyed the early scoring. Texas A&M stopped the Cardinal momentarily with a 3-0 run and two Hans putaways. A 7-2 run pushed the Stanford edge to 16-8. A trio of Aggie errors and a kill and block by Fitzmorris aided the Cardinal in the rally. The Aggies were within four at 17-13 but would get no closer as the teams traded points down the final stretch. An A&M service error gave Stanford a set-point try at 24-19. The Cardinals missed a serve, but Gray wrapped up the 25-20 the following point.

Stanford cruised to a 15-7 lead in the final set as Plummer heated up with five kills and the team managed four blocks. Texas A&M scored five of the next eight points to narrow the gap to six at 18-12 with help from kills by four different players. The Cardinal responded with a 5-2 run to go up 23-14. Two Plummer kills and a kill and a block by McClure guided the team to the advantage. A stuff by Fitzmorris and Gray put Stanford on the hill at 24-15. Texas A&M got a kill from Kiara mcGree and an ace by Gabby Litwin to thwart the Cardinal twice, but the Aggies couldn’t stop a Michaela Keefe kill, which ended the match.

 

PRESS RELEASES

Courtesy: Stanford Athletics

Sophomore Kathryn Plummer recorded 22 of Stanford’s 40 kills in a 25-17, 25-20, 25-17 win over Texas A&M, Sunday, at Reed Arena.

Stanford (4-1) hit .272 as a team and kept the Texas A&M (2-2) hitters off balance with 11.0 blocks. The Cardinal held the Aggies to a .089 attack percentage.

Plummer hit .409 (22-4-44) in her second straight 20-plus kills performance. Sophomore setter Jenna Gray registered a career-high six kills, second-most on the team, and finished with 28 assists, four digs, three blocks and an ace.

Freshman outside hitter Meghan McClure added five kills, a career-best 10 digs and three blocks for the Cardinal. Sophomore Micheala Keefe totaled four kills and a career-high four blocks. Tami Alade and Audriana Fitzmorris, Stanford’s middle blockers, tallied six and five blocks, respectively.

Sophomore libero Morgan Hentz notched 12 digs and a career-best seven assists while leading the defense. Payton Chang, Caitlin Keefe and Blake Sharp all entered the match in the third to serve. It marked the collegiate debut for Sharp.

Texas A&M was led by sophomore outside hitter Hollann Hans, who registered 12 kills and five digs. Senior libero Amy Nettles had a match-high 14 digs.

Stanford remains on the road next week, travelling to Champaign, Illinois for the Big Ten/Pac-12 Challenge. The Cardinal will take on host Illinois on Friday, Sept. 8 and face No. 5 Penn State on Saturday, Sept. 9.

 

Courtesy: Texas A&M Athletics

Texas A&M, playing its second match against a top-5 team in as many days, fell to defending national champion and No. 1-ranked Stanford, 25-17, 25-20, 25-17, today at Reed Arena to conclude the Aggie Classic.

The Aggies (2-2), who pushed eventual tournament champion and fifth-ranked Penn State to five sets in a thrilling Saturday evening contest, were unable to duplicate that impressive performance, while Stanford (4-1) got back into the win column after suffering a tournament-opening 3-1 loss to the Nittany Lions on Friday.

Stanford spotted the Aggies the first three points of the match before going on a 7-3 run to take a 7-6 lead in the opening set. Sophomore outside hitter Hollann Hans, playing on her 20th birthday, later had back-to-back kills to put the Aggies back in the lead, 12-11, but the lead would not stand. Stanford, led by sophomore outside hitter Kathryn Plummer, countered with a 10-2 run to take a lead it would not lose. Consecutive kills by Hans and senior outside hitter Kiara McGee later put the Aggies within 21-16, but A&M was unable to get any closer before the Cardinal closed out the set with a block.

Plummer, who recorded seven kills in each of the first two sets, led the Cardinal to a 16-8 lead in the second stanza. The Aggies used a 5-1 run to cut the margin to 17-13 and later stayed within four points at 23-19 and 24-20 before setter Jenna Gray put down a kill to clinch the set for the Cardinal.

Stanford, which outhit A&M, .272 to .089, in the match, used an 8-1 rally to take early command of the third set. One of Plummer’s eight kills in the set gave Stanford its largest lead at 15-7. A&M could get no closer than six points the remainder of the set before Michaela Keefe put down the match-clinching kill.

Hans led A&M with 12 kills, and libero Amy Nettles took match-high honors in digs with 14. Sophomore middle blocker Maddie Douglas made her first appearance of the season when she started the third set. In addition, hometown favorite Haley Slocum, a sophomore, made the first appearance of her career, coming in to serve in the final frame.

Plummer, who received the tournament’s Best Attacker award, finished with 22 kills while hitting .409.

The Aggies make their first road trip of the season next weekend as they compete in the HotelRed Invitational, hosted by Wisconsin in Madison. The Aggies open against Lipscomb on Friday at 6 p.m. at the UW Field House and close out the tournament against the sixth-ranked Badgers at 7 p.m.

Visit 12thMan.com for more information on Texas A&M volleyball. Aggie fans also can keep up to date with the A&M volleyball team on Facebook and on Twitter and Instagram by following @AggieVolleyball.

Aggie Classic Standings:
1. Penn State (2-0)
2. Stanford (1-1)
3. Texas A&M (0-2)

Aggie Classic Honors:
MVP: Simone Lee, Penn State
Best Attacker: Kathryn Plummer, Stanford
Best Blocker: Haleigh Washington, Penn State
Best Setter: Abby Detering, Penn State
Best Libero: Morgan Hentz, Stanford

POSTMATCH QUOTES:

TEXAS A&M HEAD COACH LAURIE CORBELLI

On today’s game…
“I suppose it was tough to expect a similar performance to last night, but I do anyways. And I told them I did. I think just not getting our attack going early and having confident attackers early really set a tone on our court of a little bit of panic. From there it spreads like wildfire. Missed passes, missed digs, missed little things that we usually do really well. It was all mental in my mind. We didn’t have a championship mentality today.”

On the success of Stanford’s Kathryn Plummer
“She’ll do that to just about every team she plays. She’s a future Olympian, no doubt.
She’s got the physicality, the smarts, the composure, the experience. She’s a beach champion as well. She’s one of the best college players I’ve ever seen. She was a big reason that they won, there’s no question, but I think we did not compete against them today. We did not come to compete hard and that’s the biggest disappointment.”

On getting the chance to host both No. 1 Stanford and No. 5 Penn State this weekend…
“I’m still really, really happy that we got this opportunity. It gives us such great feedback on our team in the second week of our season. I don’t think we could have found out this much about our team if we had played not as strong teams. I’m really upset right now with the lack of being prepared by some players, but I’m really happy overall with our youth, with our team doing their best over the weekend to put themselves out there against some really tough teams. I’m hopeful and I know that this team will learn from it. They’re not happy about it either at all, and I know that the right changes will be made.”
SENIOR LIBERO AMY NETTLES

On differences between today and yesterday’s matches…
“Today we didn’t execute like we should have. Physically, we weren’t tired. It’s just mental. Volleyball is a mental game.”

On feelings about playing these teams and where the team stands after this weekend…
“Obviously it’s disappointing to lose, but last night we were right there, neck and neck in five sets. We didn’t come out with a win, and we’re looking forward to meeting them again. We didn’t lose any confidence after last night. This morning was disappointing, but it’s encouraging because we didn’t play well and we were right there. The score was 20-25 the second set. We’re really encouraged and our confidence isn’t shaken. We’re ready to get in the gym on Tuesday and work our butts off.”

 

 

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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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