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Chapman Upsets No. 1 Riverside

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TIMES STAFF WRITER

There were many times Wednesday night when the Chapman College women’s volleyball team looked ready to fold. And that would have been understandable.

Sure, the Panthers are the fifth-ranked team in the nation according to the National Collegiate Athletic Assn. Division II poll. But on Wednesday, they were playing No. 1 UC Riverside--a team that had lost only once all season and had won 11 consecutive matches.

But when all was said and done, the Panthers looked more like No. 1 than No. 1 did.

Chapman withstood every challenge in the final two games to defeat Riverside, 12-15, 15-2, 8-15, 15-10, 15-10, in a California Collegiate Athletic Assn. match in front of 300 spectators at Chapman.

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The victory left the Panthers (22-2 overall, 6-0 in CCAA play) alone in first place in the conference and should improve their national ranking.

But more than that, it may have been a moment when Chapman’s players realized how good they can be.

“When we were able to hold off Riverside in Game 4, I think we started to believe in ourselves a little more,” Chapman Coach Mary Cahill said. “I told the girls to be ready in the next game, because they were going to come after us.”

Riverside did, taking a 4-1 lead. The Highlanders were still in front, 6-4, when the Panthers made their move.

“All I could think about was we had to play tough,” said Chapman’s Dana Beardsley, who had a game-high 25 kills. “We just had to hang on.”

The Panthers did. Rather tenuously at times, but they did hang on.

Rena Strange made three blocks as Chapman took a 10-8 lead. Karen Burley then finished Riverside off with two blocks and a kill.

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“We are such a close team, that no one can keep us down,” Beardsley said. “We kept telling each other that all through the match.”

After splitting the first two games, the Highlanders (15-2, 5-1) looked every bit the No. 1 team in Game 3. The Highlanders trailed, 8-5, but scored 10 unanswered points behind the play of Sheri Benson, who had 22 kills in the match.

But the Panthers held on in Game 4. They saw a 10-4 lead evaporate, but with the score tied 10-10, Debi Waller (15 kills) scored on a kill, then made two blocks to force a fifth game.

“I don’t think Riverside took us too seriously,” Cahill said. “I don’t mean that in a bad way. But they never saw us play, never scouted us. We saw them and knew what to expect. I think we got a little more respect tonight.”

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