It has been a season to remember for the Westmoreland Elite 14 Purple girls volleyball team. The squad began playing in October and honed its game throughout the year to make history.
The 14 Purple team qualified for the 2025 USAV Girls Junior National Championship, becoming just the second team from Westmoreland Elite to play in a national tournament. The team will travel to Dallas on June 24-29 to compete in the Freedom division, the sixth tier of the championship.
Coach Gene Larson has overseen his players’ development throughout the season. He has coached volleyball for 45 years, including Westmoreland Elite teams for 10 of those years.
The team embarked on the season with unimpressive finishes of 19th in the Frozen Lake Festival in Sandusky, Ohio, and 16th in the Steel City Freeze in Pittsburgh. Larson thought his players were capable of performing better.
“Early on, we struggled a bit because … we have young players,” Larson said. “After our first couple of tournaments, we started competing.”
The team then strung together two of its best tournament results. It was runner-up in the gold division of the Athletix tournament in Columbiana, Ohio, and it took first in the Erie Sports Center tournament in consecutive weeks to set an improved tone for the season.
The team was playing its best volleyball entering the Lucky Charm tournament in Harrisburg. That was important because finishing third in that tournament allowed it to qualify for the national championship.
Outside hitter Lilah Mrdjenovich has been a key player this year and was a major reason why the team could reach the national tournament.
“She’s been our most consistent player all year long, definitely led us in kills, probably blocking and serving and likely led us in passing every tournament,” Larson said. “We’ve had some all-around good players, but she has been our leader.”
Mrdjenovich, middle blocker Rylee Hestin and setter Lexi Temple are three prominent players in the lineup from Penn-Trafford.
“Penn-Trafford has a strong middle and high school program,” Larson said. “It is nice to get girls from that background.”
Larson also noted that defensive specialist Sofia Weimer and setter Clare Audia, who are both from Hempfield, are key players.
“I hope they’re competitive in every set of every match. … The reality is, at nationals, you can play well in every match and still not win because it’s a really strong tournament,” Larson said. “I haven’t set any expectations, except (to) play how we’ve been practicing.”
In 1978, Larson started playing volleyball in California, and he began coaching in 1980. He came to Pittsburgh to play volleyball at Pitt. The Trinity Christian School coach also played on and coached gold medal-winning teams at the Keystone State Games, so it is far from surprising his 14 Purple team qualified for the national championship.
“Volleyball is one of the defining areas in my life,” Larson said.
The other time one of the club’s teams made the girls junior national championship was the Westmoreland Elite 17 Black team in 2021.
“We’re a really strong team. We’ve had fun throughout,” Larson said. “I think our strengths are serving and timely hitting. (I’m) so proud of the girls for accomplishing this feat.”
Matthew Purucker is a TribLive staff writer. You can reach Matthew at mpurucker@triblive.com.