ELKHART ― Bryan Forbes had a day to remember Saturday.
The Penn High School senior led his team to an IHSAA boys volleyball sectional title Saturday afternoon in the inaugural state tournament series for the sport.
He then was making a clean and quick exit in his tuxedo following the championship match in Tubbs Gymnasium at Elkhart High School to attend Penn’s prom that night.
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“Honestly, this is probably one of my best days ever,” said Forbes in the Penn locker room as he dressed in his tux. “I got to play my favorite sport and win a sectional with some of my best friends, and now I get to go have fun at the prom.”
It was a good day indeed for the experienced Forbes, a six-foot outside hitter with an impressive skill set to go with a huge competitive streak.
Forbes set the tone as the Kingsmen topped Saint Joseph 25-23, 25-20, 9-25, 25-10. The Kingsmen (13-10) advance to the Valparaiso Regional on Saturday, May 24 to play the Michigan City Sectional winner. The Michigan City sectional final was later Saturday night.
The Huskies, who will lose seven seniors, finish at 14-14 after a fourth loss to the Kingsmen this season.
Penn, which had to outlast Riley 3-2 in the second semifinal match Saturday morning, seized the momentum in the title tilt. The Kingsmen trailed 22-19 in the opening set before rallying for the win. Sophomore Kelan Whitehouse, a 6-3 outside hitter, came up huge at crunch time for Penn with three kills downs the stretch for the win.
“We had to dig deep in the semifinals earlier, and we had to remember that in set one in this match,” said Penn coach Kelley Watts, who coaches the Kingsmen with her husband, Mark. “We’ve drilled on getting through the highs and the lows in a match. We pushed through in that first set.”
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The Kingsmen, who have three seniors, led 19-14 in set two before the Huskies rallied within 22-20. Junior Christian Bonner delivered a key kill late as Penn scored the final three points to go up 2-0.
The Huskies, who got strong play from senior Logan Gutermuth and fine serving from junior Colin Penn, rolled to a 14-4 lead in the third set. The Huskies closed out the set on a high to cut the Penn lead to 2-1.
The final set saw the Kingsmen regroup and take a 13-2 lead as Forbes set the tone. After an animated talk with his team following the third set, the high-flying Forbes crushed a huge kill early in the fourth and final set, following with a fist pump.
The emotional leader of the Kingsmen then helped his squad close out the match. Penn won the title when 6-6 sophomore Liam Carter had a block for match point.
“The way he (Forbes) plays, we play as a team,” stated Watts. “He just has a competitive spirit and a determination. I thought that Liam (Carter) was huge for us in the middle. Logan (Warner) had some strong hits too and Christian Bonner, who joined our team late, was a huge spark.
“To win this is absolutely huge in what is does for the future of our program in building it. At Penn, it’s all about never settling and pushing for excellence in everything. That’s the tradition there.”
Forbes admitted that he had a lot of fun in this one.
“This means a lot to me,” Forbes said. “I love this game. I’ve been playing it since I was nine. My mom is a coach, so I’ve always been around volleyball. I’m very competitive.
“It was very important to win the first set. We had to get our focus up to do that. I knew this would be a tough match. St. Joe wanted it and told me they were going to beat us this time.”
The Huskies, who beat Northridge 3-0 in the first semifinal Saturday, had lost to Penn 3-1, 2-1 and 3-1 during the regular season.
“I could not be prouder of a group,” said St. Joe coach Dani Gaff. “The most impressive thing was how they won that third set. Would we have liked to win that first set? Yes. But I prefer to live in the what’s next and not the ‘would of, should of, could of.’ My players just put together a statement win in that third set after going down 2-0. I was just real proud of them for that. Their energy was so impressive.
“Penn is a great team. They are well-rounded, especially Forbes. No. 7 (Kelan Whitehouse) did a great job for them too. My team just showed improvement in so many areas this season.”
Penn beat Riley 18-25, 19-25, 25-14, 25-16, 15-13 in the second semifinal after St. Joe bested Northridge 25-18, 25-22, 25-13. Riley finished at 15-16 and Northridge at 9-11.