For the second consecutive tournament the men's final featured Jake Gibb and Casey Patterson squaring off against Sean Rosenthal and Phil Dalhausser, and just like in Cincinnati, Gibb and Patterson took down the 'W' in Atlantic City. To be honest I wasn't expecting Gibb and Patterson to have this much success this year, for one being a new partnership, and two, having a duo of two bigs playing together (although this is now the 2nd year of Casey playing as a "small"). Still I don't know where to put this hot streak in perspective.
I don't want to say that low level teams aren't good, or that the top level teams aren't working very hard to get to where they are, but it is clear that there are two different classes of athletes playing in these tournaments.
For all other sports there is a "separation of the classes", a definitive line that states that you are either a part of the elite group of people that are head and shoulders above the rest, or you are just among the commoners working to get close to that line. Football and basketball has the NCAA, baseball has the farm system of A, AA, and AAA ball, hockey has the AHL, and even golf has a junior program and pro card that separates the already have's from the want to's. Beach volleyball, for better of for worse just mixes everyone together and as you can tell there are the familiar faces rising to the top.
After spending 3 years under the tutelage of Brett Favre, Aaron Rogers is a top 5 QB who led the league in QB rating last year at 108.0 |
At what point do you even consider yourself a "professional" in beach volleyball? Is it when you qualify for a tournament, make the money rounds, or break $20,000 in a year? For the sport there is a cyclical problem facing many of its aspiring athletes. In order for them to get better they need more time and money to dedicate themselves to their training but in order to get extra time and money they need to place higher in tournaments. So as athletes that are working at least one other job they are in fact probably closer to being low-earning amateurs, than "part-time pros".
This is more than just the creme of the crop rising to the top. This is like putting the creme of the crop in a centrifuge and selecting the most enriched type. The low-level players are bogged down other jobs, and trying to land sponsors to just make it to the events, while the top-level pros get to train, condition, and practice exclusively for their sport. Even though every top-level pro has ground it out through qualifiers at some point in their career, there is a better way to develop players. In NCAA Football, teams have the right to red shirt a player which allows them to be on the team and practice without using up a year of eligibility. I think that USAV needs to adopt some type of amateur system that allows players to develop effectively by focusing just on the sport and not on the finances and the travel, then as the creme of that crop rises, hopefully we will get to see some new faces on the podium every other tournament instead of every 5 years.
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