The paint had barely dried on Manheim Central’s District 3 Class 2A boys volleyball championship victory last Thursday, when the chatter immediately turned to what’s next.
The PIAA tournament, where the Barons have payback on their minds.
“We have to win,” Central senior middle Landon Mattiace said, with much emphasis on have.
“This one is great,” Mattiace’s teammate, senior outside hitter Reagan Miller said about hoisting district gold after a 3-0 win over York Suburban.
“But we know what’s next,” Miller continued. “It’s states. And that’s what we really want.”
Safe to say Central is plenty motivated to climb the 2A state bracket — and clear the summit this time around. The Barons reached the finale in Penn State’s storied Rec Hall last June, but dropped a 3-1 decision against mighty Meadville.
It was the second time Central reached a state finale; the Barons are 0-2, and antsy to finish the job over the next two weeks.
That L against Meadville has stuck in the craw for Central’s returning crew, and there are a lot of them. Like Mattiace, who is a matchup nightmare in the middle, and he’s ticketed for Eastern University. And Miller, a real pogo stick who can unleash from the pins with the best of them.
Senior setter Dylan Musser rallies the troops. He’s at 2,500-plus career assists, and he directs traffic and keeps plays alive like nobody’s business.
Mattiace and Miller are flanked up front by reliable senior hitters Caleb Groff and Weston Longenecker and junior middle Blake Neiles. That trio has made a huge splash as first-time starters this spring.
Senior libero Colin Rohrer is a rock in the back. Just when you think a point is over, he comes flying in for an acrobatic dig.
Musser and Miller — both electrifying jump-serve specialists — shared MVP honors in Section 2 this spring. Those two have been starting since their freshman year, and they won’t be flustered one iota on the big stage.
Central’s PIAA journey begins Tuesday, when the Barons welcome District 12 runner-up Academy of Palumbo for a 6 p.m. showdown in Derbyshire Gymnasium. Palumbo is situated in Philadelphia and represent the Philly Public League.
The Griffins and the Barons have clashed before in the state bracket. Central won 3-0 in a first-rounder in 2018, and the Barons won again, also 3-0, in the PIAA quarterfinals in 2019.
Tuesday’s survivor will book it to the state quarterfinals next Saturday, and will get the winner of District 1 champ Dock Mennonite and District 2 runner-up Crestwood on a neutral court.
The other matchups in the top of the bracket on Tuesday feature District 12 champ Lansdale Catholic against District 3 runner-up York Suburban, and District 2 champ Holy Redeemer against District 12 third-seed Carver Engineering & Science.
Central beat Lansdale Catholic 3-0 in the first round last year, and the Barons are coming off a victory over York Suburban in the district title tilt. A potential rematch there wouldn’t come until the state semifinals.
In the PVCA state rankings, Central opens the week at No. 2, York Suburban at No. 4 and Holy Redeemer at No. 5 in 2A.
The bottom half of the draw is loaded with state-ranked teams: No. 3 Shaler, the WPIAL champ, against No. 7 Saegertown, the District 10 runner-up; District 6 champ West Shamokin against No. 8 Brandywine Heights, the District 3 third-place squad; District 8 winner Obama Academy against No. 6 Ambridge, the WPIAL runner-up; and No. 1 Meadville, the District 10 champ, against No. 9 South Fayette, the WPIAL third-seed.
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Meadville is undefeated, and is out to defend its state crown. A Bulldogs vs. Barons rematch would not be a shocker. They’ve been 1-2 in the state rankings since the preseason poll back in mid-March, and they both have plenty of returning firepower.
The 2A finale is set for June 14 at 11 a.m. in Penn State’s Rec Hall. The Barons are salivating for a return trip.
While Central (20-1 overall) will unleash with its usual suspects, the Barons’ defense must keep tabs on a trio of Palumbo players on Tuesday.
Kingston Insixiengmay, an active outside hitter, has bombed 260 kills with 150 digs and 29 aces. He had 10 kills against Lansdale Catholic in the District 12 finale.
Bertrand Arifin will go toe-to-toe in the middle with Mattiace and Neiles; he has 109 kills and is the Griffins’ top blocker. Andy Le is the setter; he had 22 assists in the district title match, and he has 538 assists this season, heading into the Central match.
Palumbo is 10-12 overall, and the Griffins went 8-4 in the Philly Public League, finishing in second place in their division in the regular season.
Under veteran coach Craig Dietrich, Central captured its third straight Section 2 title, before the Barons fell to Cedar Crest 3-1 in the Lancaster-Lebanon League tournament championship match. Central, which was in the L-L finale for the third year in a row, barreled through districts without dropping a set.
The Barons are locked and loaded for a state run.
Meanwhile, four District 3 teams are in the Class 3A bracket. The champ, undefeated Cumberland Valley, gets District 1 third-seed Unionville in the first round. CV dropped a set for the first time this spring in the district finale, but the Eagles rallied nicely for a 3-1 win over Central York.
CY gets WPIAL runner-up Seneca Valley; District 3 No. 3 Governor Mifflin will square off against District 11 champ Emmaus; and District 3 No. 4 Northeastern York gets District 1 champ Pennsbury.
Nine-time PIAA champ North Allegheny, the WPIAL winner, is lurking in the bottom of the 3A bracket.
The 3A title match is also June 14 in Rec Hall, at 1:30 p.m.
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