 Argentina Pair Win First Beach Match - Johnson/Kiraly Down Canadians
at Goodwill
NEW YORK, N. Y. - The men's beach volleyball
competition opened here Wednesday (July 22) in the fourth annual Goodwill Games with a
pair of matches as Martin Conde and Esteban Martinez of
Argentina and Adam Johnson and Karch Kiraly of the
United States winning their round-robin pool play games at Wollman Rink in Central Park.
Kiraly (San Clemente, Calif.), who won a Gold Medal in the
inaugural beach volleyball competition at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games, and Johnson
(Laguna Beach, Calif.) scored a 15-8 win over John Child and Mark Heese of
Canada in a Group A match.
In Wednesday's opening match, Conde and Martinez, who
ran off seven-straight points in the match against the Martin and Paul Laciga
of Switzerland to take a commanding 13-5 lead in the opening match of Group B action
played in hazy, hot and humid 94 degree weather. The Argentina tandem posted a 15-6 win.
Ricci Luyties (San Diego)and Sinjin Smith (Pacific
Palisades, Calif.), who earned a Bronze medal at the 1994 Goodwill Games in St.
Petersburg, Russia, form the second USA tandem. The United States pair plays Guilherme
Marques and Para Ferreira of Brazil in Wednesday's fourth and final match at
approximately 6:45 p.m. (EDT). Guilherme and Para are the top-rated team on
the 1998 FIVB Beach Volleyball World Circuit.
Jan Kvalheim and Bjorn Maaseide of Norway, won the
inaugural 1994 Goodwill Games Men's Gold Medal in St. Petersburg, Russia, face Julien
Prosser and Leo Zahner of Australia Wednesday at 5:30 p.m..
The Goodwill Games men's beach volleyball competition is a
sanctioned event on the FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour and features $100,000 in prize
money. The Goodwill Games' men's Gold and Bronze medal matches will be Sunday.
Eight women's beach tandems begin competing July 29 with the Gold
and Bronze medal matches set for August 2. The women will also compete for $100,000 in
prize money. The women compete in an FIVB Beach Volleyball World Tour event this week in
Marseille, France before invading Wollman Rink. |