 Norway Spikes Fifth in Men's Beach Volleyball
NEW YORK, N. Y. - Norway's Jan Kvalheim and Bjorn
Maaseide scored a 15-13 win over John Child and Mark Heese to capture fifth-place here
Saturday (July 25) afternoon in the 1998 Goodwill Games men's beach volleyball competition
at Wollman Rink in Central Park.
The Norweigians, who won the 1994 Goodwill Games Gold medal in St.
Petersburg, Russia, shared the $8,000 purse for fifth-place while Child and Heese, the
Bronze medalists at the 1996 Atlanta Olympic Games, split $7,000 for sixth.
The Goodwill Games medal semi-finals will be held later Saturday
with the United States vs. Australia and Argentina vs. Brazil. The fourth of five
days of FIVB-sanctioned men's beach volleyball competition also features a playoff for
seventh-place. The top four teams battle for a berth in Sunday's Gold medal match
where the winning team shares the $30,000 first-place prize.
Adam Johnson and Karch Kiraly are the United States' hopes for a
men's beach volleyball Gold medal as the Americans battle the Australia tandem of Julien
Prosser and Leo Zahner at approximately 1:15 p.m. (EDT).
Saturday's first semi-final match features Group B round-robin pool
play winner Prosser and Zahner. The Aussies posted the same mark as the Argentina
tandem at 2-1, but Prosser and Zahner had the point differential edge (plus-8 points to
plus-3) to break the tie. Johnson and Kiraly posted a 2-1 record in Group A,
including a 15-3 loss to Guilherme and Para Thursday.
Brazilians Guilherme Marques and Para Ferreira, the only unbeaten
team in the 1998 Goodwill Games after three days of round-robin play with a 3-0 mark to
win the Group A pool, will be challenged at approximately 5:54 p.m. by Martin Conde and
Esteban Martinez of Argentina in the second semi-final match.
Both the semi-final and medal matches feature the FIVB's Format B
with two out of three sets to 12 points. The first two sets must be won with a
minimum lead of two points with a point limit at 12-point cap. The deciding set will
feature the rally scoring system to 12 points with a minimum lead of two points.
There is no point cap like the first two sets. The fifth- and seventh-place playoffs
are one game to 15 points with a minimum lead of two points with a 17-pont cap.
Ricci Luyties and Sinjin Smith of the United States face the Laciga
Brothers (Martin and Paul) of Switzerland at 4:30 p.m. for seventh-place as the winners
split $5,000. |