Category: Volleyball

USA Volleyball upholds Richardson suspension from coaching, training 

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USA Volleyball has upheld the suspension of Texas Fierce Elite volleyball director Ryan Richardson. This was confirmed by Lone Star regional director Will Vick last week.

“My job is always for the concern and safety of our young athletes, and that’s what we’re doing,” Vick said. “If I make an error in judgement, I’m going to make it on the side of the athlete to keep them safe.”

The extended suspension, which started Feb. 16, according to USA Volleyball, began March 27, 2024, and will continue through Aug. 31, 2024.

“I am extremely surprised by the suspension and disappointed that I have not been given any information regarding what I allegedly did wrong. The safety and security of the athletes that train with Texas Fierce Elite Volleyball is always my primary focus and concern,” Richardson said in an email. “I would never do anything to risk the physical or mental wellbeing of these strong young ladies. So, when Lone Star Region Commissioner Will Vick notified me about the suspension on February 16, 2024, I was shocked, because I had never received any complaints from any one of my players or their parents regarding anything that could have been construed as violating any of the SafeSport Rules or the USA Volleyball Code of Conduct, and Mr. Vick did not provide any information other than to generally reference these regulations.”

Vick said last week that the regional office, which reports to USA Volleyball, was flooded with communications regarding Richardson and the situation, but also had several calls of support for Richardson and his program. He added, however, that USA Volleyball’s job is to make sure that programs are run appropriately and are monitored to stop anything happening before it does.

“Again, our goal again is to keep all the kids safe, that’s it.” Vick said.

The Safe Sport Act requires “sports organizations to establish reasonable procedures to limit one-on-one interactions between an adult and an amateur athletes who is a minor without being in an observable and interruptible distance from another adult.”

“My immediate reaction was to make a request to Mr. Vick for any evidence he had to justify the suspension, and I specifically requested that he provide me with any statement, complaint, message, text, photo, or screenshot of any activity or communication that he believed violated the rules,” Richardson said in his email. “To this very day, I have received nothing. The procedural and disciplinary rules of USA Volleyball require that any member who is disciplined receive notification of the specific evidence to support the decision, the specific rule that was violated, and an opportunity to appeal the decision to USA Volleyball. Despite numerous attempts on my behalf to get information regarding the allegation against me, to this very day, Mr. Vick has ignored my requests. He has failed to notify me of what I did wrong, he has failed to notify me of what rule I violated, and he has denied me the opportunity to appeal his decision, in violation of the procedural rules of the Lone Star Region and USA Volleyball.

“Mr. Vick passed judgment on me without telling me what I was accused of doing or giving me an opportunity to respond. I have filed a grievance with USA Volleyball for his failure to provide me with basic information during the process, as is required by the Rules, and for his violation of the Lone Star Region Rules and USA Volleyball procedures with regard to disciplinary action.”

Richardson’s name appears on the USA Volleyball website with a pair of violations: “Violation of USAV Code of Conduct, Violation of U.S. Center for SafeSport Conduct.” Richardson’s name, however, did not appear on the SafeSport database as of Monday afternoon.

“I am an enthusiastic proponent of the Minor Athlete Abuse Prevention Policy (MAAPP) of SafeSport and in the USA Volleyball Code of Conduct, because they are important safeguards to protect our sport and the athletes that make it so great. I have always made a concerted effort in my club to educate my coaches, athletes, and their parents with regard to these rules, and do our best to follow them always,” Richardson said. “When Mr. Vick notified me of my suspension, he mentioned that I ‘appeared’ to be in violation of the ‘Media Rule’ for the MAAPP of SafeSport. I checked, however, and there is no ‘Media Rule’ for SafeSport.

“While this has not affected my club’s success in winning tournaments, as we just won the Big South Qualifer (sic) this weekend in Atlanta Georgia in both 15u and 16u, it has affected my ability to work with my athletes, who are my main concern.”

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Richardson under fire by USA Volleyball

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Texas Fierce Elite club volleyball coach and director Ryan Richardson has been suspended from coaching duties until further notice.

“He was suspended to things contrary to the rules under the Safe Sport act,” said Will Vick, commissioner of the Lonestar Region under USA Volleyball. “He is being looked at by USA Volleyball. This could be permanent or done away with right away, once I get something back from USA Volleyball.

“Right now, we’re just keeping him away from the girls he’s coaching. I’m getting complaints from parents.”

When asked for a comment, Richardson originally said “I have some things to work out but other than that I don’t know what so no comment.”

Then he texted that he would “love to sit down and talk.”

Vick added the suspension to Richardson included training those players, but added “I’m not going to be looking over my shoulder.”

USA Volleyball communications manager BJ Hoeptner Evans said Wednesday she was not familiar with the situation but asked for an email query so she could find out more on the situation. As of Friday afternoon, she had not returned emails

The Safe Sport Act requires sports organizations to establish reasonable procedures to limit one-on-one interactions between an adult and an amateur athlete who is a minor.

Richardson said he called the Safe Sport Center on two occasions but they responded they had nothing regarding him.

However, Hilary Nemchik, senior director of communications and media relations gave a statement that “The Center does not comment on matters to protect the integrity of our investigative process.” She did add that the center can use discretion in some reports to send it for review to the governing body, in this case, USA Volleyball.

“It’s a far-fetched, pretty horrible thing and claim,” Richardson said. “I’ve gotten emails and stuff I’ll show. Sometimes kids leave and that’s part of the business – we’ll lose two to three kids a season because it’s just not a good fit. That’s just how it works. That will never change, but to retaliate and defame someone’s character is pretty awful.

“I called Safe Sport and I clarified with them that it wasn’t a Safe Sport situation. They told me to call back to clarify but I’ve gotten nothing.”

While there are confirmed communications sent to USA Volleyball and the Lonestar Region regarding Richardson since at least last summer claiming various misconduct situations, the most recent issue seems to have stemmed from a photo Richardson posted on social media. In the photo, Richardson is taking a bathroom selfie while only wearing boxers, which are slightly pulled down on one side and not leaving much to the imagination.

Multiple communications sent to either the Lonestar Region or USA Volleyball have questioned the appropriateness of the photo, whether a coach who trains teen females, should be subjecting them to that type of photo.

Richardson at first said he had never posted anything inappropriate but then added “that was on my private page, after I worked out.”

Roy Stroman, athletic director and head football coach at Weslaco High School has a daughter who trains with Richardson and adamantly said he has never seen anything inappropriate from Richardson.

“Being a high school athletic coordinator and football coach there are things we’ve seen and come across, there are different coaching styles – I know what type of coach Ryan is,” Stroman said. “He is very disciplined and fundamentally sound and he’s tough. But my wife and I are very supportive of his club and drills and teams he has put together.

“We don’t have any problems with anything he does. Not everybody is perfect. There are things I need to work on and I’m sure things he needs to work on. These girls respond to him and plays hard for him and I know at the end of the day they need their coach.”

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Castillo named new McAllen Memorial volleyball coach

Sharyland High volleyball coach Raul Castillo during a playoff game at McAllen Memorial High school on Tuesday, Nov. 07, 2023 in McAllen. Castillo was named the new McAllen Memorial head volleyball coach on Monday. (Delcia Lopez | [email protected])

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Sharyland High volleyball coach Raul Castillo has been named the new McAllen Memorial volleyball coach, approved by the McAllen ISD school board Monday night.

Castillo has been the head coach at Sharyland for 10 years, coming over from Palmview after helping at that school. He took the Sharyland position when current Sharyland Pioneer coach Laura Cavazos left Sharyland to start the program at Sharyland Pioneer after those schools split into two campuses.

Castillo replaces Ashley Doffing, who stepped down almost immediately after this past season concluded. Doffing took the Mustangs to three Sweet 16s in her five years there, continuing a deep playoff run tradition. Memorial has been to the Sweet 16 seven times in the past past 11 seasons, more than any other program in the Valley.

Castillo leaves behind a team that won the past two District 31-5A titles, and reached the Sweet 16 one time, two years ago. The Rattlers held an 88-7 record overall during the past two seasons and were 35-1 in district play during that span.

He said recently that he informed his team he would be applying for the position, so they wouldn’t hear it first from anyone else. The Rattlers return two All-Area superstars for their senior year, outside Kenisha Martinez and setter/hitter Kassandra De La Garza.

Meanwhile, Memorial loses a bulk of its players to graduation, including The Monitor’s 2023-24 All-Area Player of the Year, Amare Hernandez, a Texas A&M commit, and most of its starting six – Hernandez, Madisyn Sosa, Gabby Torres and Leah Garcia, who all started since their freshmen year, are some of the losses, but not all.

Some may find irony in the fact that during the 2022-23 season, Sharyland High won 29 straight before losing to Memorial in a five-set thriller. This past year, the Rattlers carried a 43-match win streak, at the time the longest in the state, when Memorial swept them to advance to the Sweet 16.

During his 10 seasons, Castillo held a 261-140 win-loss record, a .651 winning percentage, that included a shortened 7-8 season when the COVID-19 pandemic hit.

This is the fourth coaching change at McAllen High Schools in recent years. Doffing was the first, then Michael Smith replaced Paula Dodge at McAllen High followed by Estefania Portillo taking over the McHi post after Smith left lat the end of last school year.

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UIL’s new volleyball alignment released

The UIL released its biennial 2024-2025 and 2025-2026 reclassification and realignment Thursday, reshaping the high school sports landscape in Texas for the next two seasons. Below are the new volleyball districts following the UIL reclassification and realignment.  You can find the football alignments at rgvsports.com.

VOLLEYBALL

District 31-6A

Edinburg High

Edinburg Economedes

Edinburg North

La Joya High

PSJA High

Weslaco

District 32-6A

Brownsville Hanna

Brownsville Veterans

Harlingen High

Los Fresnos

San Benito

District 30-5A

La Joya Juarez-Lincoln

La Joya Palmview

Laredo Cigarroa

Laredo Martin

Laredo Nixon

Mission High

Mission Veterans

Rio Grande City

Roma

District 31-5A

Edinburg Vela

McAllen High

McAllen Memorial

McAllen Rowe

PSJA Memorial

PSJA North

PSJA Southwest

Sharyland High

Sharyland Pioneer

District 32-5A

Brownsville Lopez

Brownsville Pace

Brownsville Porter

Brownsville Rivera

Donna

Donna North

Edcouch-Elsa

Harlingen South

Mercedes

Weslaco East

District 32-4A

Brownsville Harmony School of Innovation

Brownsville Jubilee

Grulla

Hidalgo

Le Feria

Port Isabel

Valley View

District 31-3A

Alamo IDEA

Donna IDEA

Edinburg IDEA

Edinburg Quest IDEA

North Mission IDEA

Monte Alto

Pharr IDEA

Vanguard Mozart – Alamo

Vanguard Rembrandt – Pharr

Vanguard Beethoven

District 32-3A

Brownsville IDEA Frontier

Brownsville IDEA Riverview

Brownsville IDEA Sports Park

Robindale IDEA

Lyford

Progreso

Rayondville

Rio Hondo

Santa Rosa

Weslaco IDEA Pike

District 32-2A

Ben Bolt – Palito Blanco

La Villa

Premont

Riviera Kaufer

Santa Maria

District 32-1A

Lasara

San Isidro

San Perlita

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Cuellar, Castillo named The Monitor’s 2023 Volleyball Coaches of the Year

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When Caroline Cuellar first stepped onto the court to lead PSJA High, her goal wasn’t to just win, but to create a winning organization and culture throughout the volleyball program.

“I want kids to say they want to play volleyball for PSJA High,” she had said.

After three straight District 31-6A titles, including the past two going undefeated, it’s mission accomplished. But the plan doesn’t stop there.

The Bears, who overflowed with talent last season, have compiled a 90-33 record the past three years and despite the loss next season of the bulk of her offense and libero, Cuellar will still bring enough back to challenge for a fourth one. That longevity has always been the goal.

Likewise, Castillo and his squad have put together back-to-back dominant district titles in arguably the Valley’s toughest and deepest district — 31-5A and has had winning streak of 30 games two years ago en route to a Sweet 16 appearance, and a 43-match win streak this season, with one of only three losses losses coming to Cuellar and her Bears.

The Rattlers have been knocking on the door for a few years prior but could not break through “the McAllens” as McHi, Memorial and Rowe are referred as. Now, the tide has turn and with Hitter of the Year, junior Kenisha Martinez and classmate and Setter of the Year Kassandra De La Garza returning it looks like everyone else will have to take a turn playing the waiting game.

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Palmview’s Zieske, Arevalo are The Monitor’s Co-Newcomers of the Year

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Palmview took everybody by storm this past season. A team that many picked to be a playoff contender, became so much more than that.

While the Lobos already had a solid foundation, freshman outside Miley Zieske and freshman libero Jessica Arevalo added more punch and counter punch to the team.

Combined, they were a knockout.

Zieske and Arevalo have been named The Monitor’s 2023 Volleyball Co-Newcomers of the Year.

Arevalo, the District 30-5A libero of the year, and Zieske, the district’s newcomer of the year, led Palmview to the first district title in program history,

Arevalo was a non-stop, never-surrender defender who could reach balls that had the opponent already celebrating. By the time the play ended, Zieske had collected one of 394 kills on the season.

The duo combined for 925 service receptions, clearly that tactic of attacking them not working for the opposition. Zieske was also third on the team in digs (243) while Arevalo paced the squad with 566. With just four seniors on the team, all who contributed heavily for the Lobos, the future looks bright inthe long (Zieske) and short (Arevalo) short runs.

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Brownsville Pace’s Venegas takes The Herald/Star Coach of the Year honors

Coach – Daya Venegas, Brownsville Pace

Brownsville Pace head coach Daya Venegas was proud to coach a District 32-5A title team, especially with the group of girls she had.

Venegas led the Vikings to a 31 season that was capped off by a district title. Venegas said she grew a lot as a coach, like any season, and was able to do with talented seniors and underclassmen – a different journey, she said.

“Team bonding and developing chemistry was an instrumental part of our success, and coaching requires us to grow in the emotional and relationship aspect of the sport,” Venegas said.

Venegas also said it takes a good team to win games, but it takes a village to win a district title, and the Vikings had that – great players, supportive parents, a solid coaching staff, and a wonderful fan base.

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Brownsville St. Joseph’s Cortinas is The Herald/Star Sub-5A MVP

Sub-5A MVP – Deliany Cortinas, Brownsville St. Joseph

Brownsville St. Joseph’s Deliany Cortinas had an outstanding senior year that could not have ended better for the Lower Valley’s sub-5A MVP.

After helping Brownsville St. Joseph to a playoff appearance out of a challenging TAPPS district, the senior held her own against a tough Katy St. John XXIII and then balled out in the all-star game.

“At the beginning, the season started a little out of place, but my coaches were always there and got the best out of me mentaly and physically,” Cortinas said. “I know in each game that I gave it my everything.”

Cortinas finished the season with 354 kills, 168 digs, 68 aces and 96 blocks.

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Brownsville Pace’s Sophia Saiz is The Herald/Star Newcomer of the Year

Newcomer of the Year – Sophia Saiz, Brownsville Pace

It is expected for more-seasoned club players to have somewhat of an impact as a freshman, but Sophia Saiz made more than just an impact. She was a key player to the Vikings capturing a District 32-5A title.

Saiz, a setter, had 555 assists, 298 digs, 79 aces and 411 kills. If the freshman was not setting up senior Andie Lozano-Lomeli, she was finishing off offensive plays herself from the outside hitter position.

Brownsville Pace’s Sophia Saiz (9) attempts an assist on Tuesday against Harlingen South in a District 32-5A meeting at Harlingen South High School. (Andrew Cordero/Special to The Monitor)

The freshman said that she learned a lot this season and is ready to be a leader on the team in the upcoming years and head coach Daya Venegas also echoed that sentiment that will have fans and youth players excited to watch the next three years.

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San Benito’s Ibarra is The Herald/Star Utility Player of the Year

Utility Player of the Year – Jakeida Ibarra, San Benito

The Greyhounds captured a District 32-6A title for the first time in decades and a key part of the success was the all-around play of senior Jakeida Ibarra.

Ibarra, a senior captain for the Greyhounds, was one of the better defensive players for her team while also acting as one of the best hitters on a team that gained a lot of momentum during district play that carried on to win important games.

San Benito’s Jakeida Ibarra (2) at the net against Brownsville Rivera in a District 32-6A meeting during the 2023 season. (Andrew Cordero/Special to The Monitor)

Ibarra said it was honor to be a part of team that was able to create history in San Benito. And even though she is graduating, expects the Greyhounds to be a top team in district next season.

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