USA Closes Pool Play at 5-0; Serbia Tops Russia for 2nd in Pool C

  0 Wendy Mayer | September 18th, 2018 | News

2018 FIVB Men’s World Championships – Preliminary Pool C

  • Sept. 12-18, 2018
  • Bari, Italy
  • Pool C: No. 2 USA, No. 4 Russia, No. 11 Serbia, No. 16 Australia, No. 24 Tunisia, No. 30 Cameroon

The Americans secured the Pool C title with its fifth-straight win on Tuesday, topping Tunisia via sweep. Serbia meanwhile edged out Russia in five sets to claim the second spot in the group.

The United States will now head to Sofia, Bulgaria to compete in Pool G with Iran, Canada and host Bulgaria. Serbia is set for Pool H play in Varna, Bulgaria, with Poland, France and Argentina.

Russia will head to Assago, Italy, for Pool E play with Italy, the Netherlands and Finland.

USA def. Tunisia 3-0 (25-12, 25-18, 25-13)

“There is a great satisfaction in our team since we ended as the first-ranked team in Pool C,” head coach John Speraw said. “This round was really difficult, but we caught a good start and kept our pace until the last match, while performing better and better. Even between sets, even though we won pretty handily, we would talk about ‘We could be a little bit better in transition or we could be a little bit better about how we are communicating some of those sets.'”

The Americans dealt a crushing blow with their serve, pounding Tunisia with 17 aces, while allowing just two. The United States also boasted a 38-20 lead in kills and 7-2 advantage in blocks to overcome 19 miscues, while earning just 13 points off Tunisian miscues.

Taylor Sander (13), Max Holt (12) and Aaron Russell (10) led Team USA with double-digit scoring efforts. Holt served up six aces, including four in the final stanza, while Sander added six perfect serves to a team-best nine kills. Russell tallied eight putaways, one block and one ace. Four other players added five or more points: Micah Christenson (7), David Smith (7), Matthew Anderson (6) and Benjamin Patch (5). Christenson served up three aces and notched a team-best two blocks, while Patch did all his scoring as a substitute in the final stanza with three kills, a block and an ace. David Mcdonnell and Jake Langlois also saw action as substitutes in the match.

Ali Bongui managed a team-best seven points on six kills and an ace for the Tunisians. Wassim Ben Tara, Mohamed Ali Ben Othmen and Nabil Miladi chipped in four points apiece, each notching three kills.

The United States jumped ahead 8-3 in Set 1 and pushed the advantage to 16-8 en route to a dominant 25-12 win.

Tunisia shifted its lineup in Set 2, but the result was the same with the Americans cruising to a 25-18 victory.

The Americans finished off the match with a crushing 25-13 win including four aces by Max Holt.

Serbia def. Russia 3-2 (25-21, 24-26, 25-17, 22-25, 15-12)

  • Serbia moves to 4-1 (12 points); Russia falls to 3-2 (10 points)
  • Match Stats
  • P2 Stat Sheet

Russia won the block (9-4), but gave up 30 points on errors (to 23) and trailed Serbia in kills (64-63) and aces (13-6) in the loss.

Opposite Aleksandar Atanasijevic and outside Uros Kovacevic led the way for Serbia with 23 and 21 points respectively. Atanasijevic downed 19 kills and added a team-best four aces, while Kovacevic chipped in 18 kills, two aces and a block. Marko Ivovic (16) and Srecko Lisinac (11) rounded out the double-digit scoring efforts. Ivovic starred in all facets of the game with 10 kills, a team-leading three blocks and three aces. Lisinac served up four aces to go with his seven putaways.

Russia opted to put captain Sergey Grankin at the helm of the offense in place of Alexander Butko. He ran a balanced attack with four players managing double-digit tallies: Egor Kliuka (19), Maxim Mikhailov (14), Dmitriy Muserskiy (15) and Dmitry Volkov (14). Kliuka downed 17 kills and added two blocks, while Mikhailov notched 14 putaways and Muserskiy and Volkov turned in 11 putdowns apiece. Muserskiy also served up four aces.

Russia boasted the early lead, but Serbia pulled within three at 16-13 and leveled the score at 17. In the end, Atanasijevic clinched the Serbian win with an ace.

Russia again grabbed the early advantage at 8-5, but held on this time, pushing ahead 16-11. After a late tie, Russia knotted the match at a set apiece at 26-24.

Butko was back on the court in Set 3 as a substitute alongside Yury Berezhko and Victor Poletaev, but it was not enough to hold off the 25-17 Serbian win.

Russia again found a counterpunch, capturing a 25-22 win to send the match to a decisive fifth set.

Matches Pts Sets Points
Rank Team W L W L Ratio W L Ratio
1  United States 5 0 13 15 5 3.000 456 383 1.191
2  Serbia 4 1 12 14 7 2.000 476 430 1.107
3  Russia 3 2 10 12 6 2.000 422 366 1.153
4  Australia 2 3 7 9 11 0.818 428 442 0.968
5  Cameroon 1 4 3 4 12 0.333 334 398 0.839
6  Tunisia 0 5 0 2 15 0.133 317 414 0.766
Date Time Score Set 1 Set 2 Set 3 Set 4 Set 5 Total Report
12 Sep 14:00 Cameroon  3–0  Tunisia 25–20 28–26 25–21 78–67 P2 Report
12 Sep 17:00 Australia  0–3  Russia 21–25 20–25 16–25 57–75 P2 Report
12 Sep 20:30 United States  3–2  Serbia 15–25 25–14 21–25 25–20 15–10 101–94 P2 Report
13 Sep 17:00 Australia  2–3  United States 23–25 20–25 25–22 25–23 10–15 103–110 P2 Report
13 Sep 20:30 Cameroon  0–3  Serbia 28–30 16–25 17–25 61–80 P2 Report
14 Sep 17:00 Australia  3–1  Cameroon 21–25 25–17 25–22 25–20 96–84 P2 Report
14 Sep 20:30 Russia  3–0  Tunisia 25–19 25–6 25–19 75–44 P2 Report
15 Sep 17:00 Serbia  3–1  Tunisia 20–25 25–20 25–21 25–20 95–86 P2 Report
15 Sep 20:30 United States  3–1  Russia 25–23 20–25 25–23 25–20 95–91 P2 Report
16 Sep 17:00 Cameroon  0–3  United States 18–25 20–25 14–25 52–75 P2 Report
16 Sep 20:30 Serbia  3–1  Australia 25–20 21–25 25–17 25–19 96–81 P2 Report
17 Sep 17:00 Russia  3–0  Cameroon 25–16 30–28 25–15 80–59 P2 Report
17 Sep 20:30 Australia  3–1  Tunisia 16–25 25–17 25–19 25–16 91–77 P2 Report
18 Sep 17:00 United States  3–0  Tunisia 25–12 25–18 25–13 75–43
18 Sep 20:30 Serbia  3–2  Russia 25–21 24–26 25–17 22–25 15–12 111–101

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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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