When Manheim Central’s boys volleyball team flexes its collective muscles, that usually means a long night for the Barons’ opposition.
Central flexed said muscles Tuesday night. And the Barons never let Linville Hill Christian up for air.
Flashing outstanding balance the entire way around the rotation, Central overwhelmed the Warriors 3-0 in a District 3 Class 2A semifinal on the Barons’ home court in Manheim.
“We had to get the lead and play with the lead,” Central hitter Weston Longenecker said. “That was really important for us. Once we put the pedal down, there really wasn’t much they could do. Once we started playing our ball, we showed how we can play.”
With balance. Power. And plenty of tenacity in the digging and blocking departments. It was a pretty epic performance by the Lancaster-Lebanon League Section 2 champs and league runners-up.
Set scores were 25-9, 25-9 and 25-12. Central trailed a grand total of one time, and that’s when Linville Hill — enjoying one of its finest volleyball seasons in program history under coach Drew Wingard — had a 1-0 lead in the third set.
The Barons, who also locked up a spot in the state playoffs, were never challenged.
“It’s tough to put into words,” Central coach Craig Dietrich said. “We played lights out. We never let them in it.”
Top-seeded Central (19-1) clinched a spot in Thursday’s district championship match. The Barons will host No. 2 York Suburban, which topped No. 3 Brandywine Heights 3-1 in the other semifinal.
Central blanked York Suburban 3-0 in a nonleague match in York last month. The rematch is for the district crown. It’s the sixth time the Barons will play for district gold; Central fell to Exeter in last year’s finale, and the Barons’ lone district championship came back in 2019.
“This is really big,” Longenecker said. “We’ve worked really hard, and we really want this one. We’re going back, and we’ve built up our confidence. We have to play our ball, and play like it’s going to be our game.”
Linville Hill (18-3) is still alive; the Warriors will play at Brandywine Heights on Thursday in the third-place match. The winner goes to the PIAA playoffs. The loser is out.
Tuesday, Central bolted to leads of 9-0 and 12-1 in the first set and 6-0 in the second set. Linville Hill’s longest scoring rally was a 2-0 clip in the third, cutting the Barons’ lead to 15-6.
Central fired on all cylinders throughout. Dylan Musser steered the offensive attack with 41 assists. Reagan Miller slammed 13 kills. Landon Mattiace owned the middle with 10 kills and three blocks. Longenecker chipped in with nine kills. Colin Rohrer made the defense tick with 14 digs.
It was a total team effort.
Miller showed the way in the opening set, blistering five kills. His back-to-back aces gave Central a 16-4 edge. Miller had four kills on the Barons’ first seven points of the match, and Central set the tone from the jump.
Miller had seven more kills in the second set, including three straight slams during the Barons’ 6-0 opening salvo. Blake Neiles and Miller had kills, Longenecker had two kills, and Musser sizzled an ace during Central’s late 5-0 clip for a 2-0 lead.
Longenecker had three kills in a 10-point stretch in the third, when the Barons went 7-0 after falling behind 1-0 to seize control for good.
Up next, York Suburban for the gold trophy.
“It would mean a lot because this group of kids has been really fun to work with,” Dietrich said. “Some of them are four-year starters, and a lot of them were contributors in a couple of state tournaments. To put another banner up there with 2019 would be very satisfying.”
In Class 3A on Tuesday:
Central Dauphin 3, Cedar Crest 0
The L-L League champs were eliminated from the tournament after a 25-20, 25-22, 25-20 setback against the seventh-seeded Rams at Cedar Crest.
The Falcons (19-4) were seeking their second trip to the PIAA playoffs in the last three years. But CD KO’d third-seeded Cedar Crest in the win-or-go-home consolation round. The Rams must win Thursday’s fifth-place match to advance to states.
Tate Tadajweski had 10 kills and three blocks, Section 1 MVP Jack Wolgemuth had nine digs, and Ryder Rohrer dished off 32 assists for Cedar Crest, which won its first section title and first L-L League championship this season.
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