The boys volleyball postseason begins this week in Missouri and next week in Illinois. Here are 5 storylines to watch:
1. For De Smet, ‘pressure is a privilege’
The Spartans roll into the District 7 tournament on a 20-match winning streak. De Smet (28-1) is seeking its third state championship and first since 2023.
De Smet senior Evan Strahlendorf said he and his teammates expect every opponent’s best effort.
“Our coaches always said that pressure is a privilege,” Strahlendorf said. “We know that. From now on, every single game matters. Doesn’t matter about a record. All that matters is we win the next game, we keep going. There’s a lot of great teams in the playoffs that we’re going to be playing against.”
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Strahlendorf is part of a high-powered versatile attack with Cole Esparza and Riley Massey. Setters Ryker Whittle and Will Glosemeyer run the offense, and libero Rory Luina leads a stingy defense.
Five Spartans were part of the 2023 championship team.
“Cole and Will and Rory were all on the bench two years ago, Evan and Riley were on the court,” De Smet coach Tim Haffner said. “Riley’s won a state championship in basketball, so he knows what that feels like in those big moments. And so that goes a long way for sure.”
2. Rocky road, part 1
If De Smet advances to state, it will have earned the trip. One team will advance to the final four in Cape Girardeau out of Districts 5-8, a grouping that features four of the top six teams and five of the top 10 teams in Missouri.
That group includes defending state champion Lafayette (No. 6) and state runner-up Francis Howell Central (No. 2). No. 5 Marquette, No. 10 Francis Howell North and No. 11 Parkway Central make advancing out of districts daunting task, let alone getting through sectionals and quarterfinals.
“We’ve had our eyes on the goal of winning a state championship all season, and we said right from the start of the year that we’re going to have to play one good team after another, and if we win, we will have absolutely deserved it, because you will have not had an easy match to get there,” Haffner said.
3. Rocky road, part 2
The quadrant containing Districts 1-4 isn’t exactly a cakewalk either with three of the state’s top seven teams vying for one ticket to Cape Girardeau.
If seeds hold, No. 4 St. Louis U. High and No. 7 Vianney are on a collision course in the sectional round. The two perennial powers split a pair of regular-season matchups.
Barring an upset, No. 3 Lindbergh will be awaiting the winner in the quarterfinals. SLUH edged the Flyers in five sets on April 15. Lindbergh did not play Vianney in the regular season.
4. Can Belleville East break through?
Last year, the Lancers dropped a heartbreaker to Lincoln-Way West in the sectional championship, falling 26-24 in the third set.
East returned a talented, battle-tested team this season but advancing to the school’s first state tournament won’t be easy. The Lancers will likely have to get past conference rivals O’Fallon and Edwardsville to get to the sectional championship, where state power Lincoln Way-East might be waiting.
The Lancers beat both O’Fallon and Edwardsville earlier this season and have rematches against both to finish the regular season.
5. Back to the future
Should Francis Howell Central emerge from the loaded District 5-8 quadrant, it could have a familiar foe in the semifinals in Fort Zumwalt South.
The Bulldogs are the top-ranked team in Districts 9-12 and if the rankings hold they will be making their first trip to the state semifinals since 2021. Howell Central beat Zumwalt South in the quarterfinals last season and in a regular season meeting on March 29.
The last time both Howell Central and Zumwalt South both advanced to the state semifinals was in 2012, before the Missouri State High School Activities Association recognized boys volleyball as an official sport and combined all schools into a single class. Both schools won state titles in 2012 with Howell Central in Class 4 and Zumwalt South in Class 3.