Saturday, July 3, 2010

EGYPT




Hello All! Greetings from Cairo, Egypt!

This year's World League has taken me to places most people never get to travel too. Russia, Finland, and Egypt. Each place has been uniquely special for different reasons. Egypt, for me, has to be one of the most historic places in the world. From Joseph being sold into Egypt by his brothers to Moses freeing his people and parting the Red Sea, Egpyt embodies so much history that it's even hard to imagine being able to stand in the same place and walk on the such sacred ground.
We flew into Cairo from Frankfurt at about 8pm on Wednesday night. I purposely requested a window on the left side of the plane so that as we flew in I would be able to see the great pyramids. Knowing that this was a short trip and its main purpose and focus was to win our matches, I didn't know if I would get a chance to get out and see them. Flying into Cairo, we flew directly around the pyramids and even from 15,000 feet above them they looked spectacular. Once we landed into Cairo we spent another 2 hours at the airport waiting for all of our bags to make it...all but 2 did. Alfee Reft our libero, and Riley Salmon bags didn't make it. Its Saturday and they still haven't arrived, no telling what little boy is walking around with USA Volleyball gear on and size 13 volleyball shoes. Thursday was like any other day for us, we woke up, ate breakfast, showed some video, and left for practice. On this trip, like all our trips, we take a few additional coaches along with us. This trip we were fortunate enough to have Shawn Patchell, BYU Men's Head Coach and Arnie Ball, IPFW Head Coach. Patchell and I go back about 7 years now, so it was exciting and fun to have him on the trip. He had coached our Junior Natl team and had created a friendship with the Junior Natl coach of Egypt. He expressed his interest in wanting to see the pyramids and knowing that Thursday was really our only day to get out and see them, Mohammed (Egpyt Coach) agreed to take Shawn and I in his car to see them. What an opportunity! So in all USA gear, we risked getting mobbed and went to the pyramids.
I can't begin to describe the Pyramids and the Sphinx. It's amazing to see these things up close and in the flesh! Being nearly 6,000 years old, they are in great shape and leave you in wonder. Each ton stone was carried in a barge from the nile one by one.We were treated to quite the experience to be able to see the Pyramids of Giza and the Sphinx both on Camel an by horseback. The pyramids are guarded at every post and are only open from 9am-4pm each day. There is a huge massive 20 foot wall and fence that surrounds the entire area with cameras everywhere you look. Obviously this is pretty standard procedure now since there has been documented tomb robbers over the years. The incredible part of it all is seeing how great of shape they are in. Right where the pyramids are is the start of the Sahara Desert. They are still finding new tombs under and around the pyramids. Just incredible. The pictures only do little justice.

Last night we played our 3rd match against this young and talented Egyptian team. The arena we are playing in has a capacity of about 30,000. They brought in about 5,000 military students in full jump suits, if you didn't know any better you would think they were prisoners. Seriously, they were in the same color jumpsuits and were under watchful eye by their officers. They brought with them a lot of energy. We struggled out of the gate as we have so often this summer. Egypt took game 1 and we did our part and a great job of being resilient and grinding out a win when really nothing was working for us early and each set we played more and more steady and were able to win in 5. It's never fun dropping a point by going 5, but a win in 5 is much better than a loss in 5.

Saturday, June 5, 2010

Back in the USSR!

As I got off the plane in Ekaterinburg, Russia I couldn't help but sing the words..."Bu-bu-bu back in the U.S.S.R, you don't know how lucky you are, bu bu bu bu back in the USSR!" Who would have thought that I would be in the former Soviet Union Russia.

Ok, lets go back a bit before I started singing...We flew out of LAX on Memorial Day, Monday May 31, and had an easy 11 hour plane ride to Frankfurt, Germany. I sat in the second to last row in the back and had an aisle seat, maybe the worst sit you could have on a long plane ride. If you want to sleep, youre best chance of that is getting either a window seat, or a middle seat on the long row in the middle section. I, unfortunately, had the aisle on the long row. It wasn't all too terrible except the fact that once I had popped my 10mg Ambient, my neighbor needed to get out nearly every 30 minutes....needless to say my sleep wasn't too effective on the way to Frankfurt. We arrived in Frankfurt and had 4 hours to kill...so we did like any tourist would do, we went to the nearest Starbucks, I got a grande white hot chocolate...don't know if it gets any better than that. We went to the Star Alliance lounge (a perk of traveling and racking up a ton of Frequent Flyer miles) and had ourselves some nice big comfy chairs and couches to sit on, watched a little French Open and next thing we knew we were boarding our plane for our next leg to Helsinki, Finland....the Marathon day contd on!

To be completely honest, I don't even remember how long it took us from Frankfurt to Helsinki, maybe a two hour flight? Who knows, I put my headphones in, drowned out the airplane noise, put on some soft jams and I was out before we left the ground and woke up as we were descending into Helsinki! Not a bad trip at all!

I wish I could say the layover in Helsinki was as smooth as the layover in Frankfurt because, it was not at all, we had 6 hours to kill in the airport. It should be noted that 70% of Finland's economy revolves around Nokia phones...when they are good, the country is good. Another fact, the sun really never goes down in Finland this time of year. So...there were not a ton of people at the airport nor was there much to do. Ryan Millar and I, after rechecking our bags, went into the security area and found a nice little cafe with really nice soft chairs (a must for our butts after flying 16 hours at this point) but they were closing so we were forced to get our meals to go and eat them at the gate on the not so comfy chairs, a let down for sure. Millar (3 time Olympian, Gold Medalist, All-American BYU) snagged a wheelchair which was way more comfortable than sitting in the IKEA metal chairs in the airport. Literally, no lie, if you walked around the airport you would think you were in an IKEA store. Must be a scandinavian thing! So, i managed to eat my burger, which was made of minced meat, i think i spelled that wrong but regardless the burger was as bad as I misspelled that word. Finland is not known for its high quality beef i take it. Not sure if im excited for the food to come in Finland....Its been awful here in Russia!

After a 3 hour plane ride we made it into Ekaterinburg, Russia on Wednesday morning local time 6am. We left LAX mind you on Monday at 2:50pm. I was never a math major but that was a 30+ hour travel for us to Russia! But, we were all in good spirits, at least most of us because we have 5 players who just finished playing with their pro teams here in Russia and flew back to the states to train with us and 2 weeks later they had to come back, they weren't too excited about being back in Russia but the rest of us were happy to be off a plane.

This city is about 600 miles directly east of Moscow, in the flat land area. It is very green and lush here this time of here but very cold, -30 here in the winter time. Yikes! We flew into sunny skys and high 60's weather, can't complain. This city actually is on the border of where Europe and Asia are divided, and there is an actual line just outside the city that you can be standing on both the European continent and the Asian continent at the same time....I thought that was pretty cool actually. Also, a little factoid about this place, it has a famous church here called the church of the blood, it is a new church that was built on the site of the former Czar Nikolas Romanoff and his families mansion. The story goes when lenin and the red army were trying to take over power they came here, to the royal families mansion and killed the entire family, Czar nikolas, his wife and four kids in the basement. This was in 1917. So, they dug up the bodies 20 years ago or so and moved them to St. Petersburg and built this beautiful church on top of where the house was. The basement is the same as when the house was there though, so they left it as it were. Pretty crazy feeling though because they have pictures of the royal family outside the church all blown up really big for everyone to see.

Oh yeah, we came here to play volleyball, I almost forgot. Well, there wasn't too much to report there, the first night was absolutely awful, from what people have said it was the most lopsided loss by a US team. We lost in 3-0. It was not so great. We showed up a bit more prepared the next night and lost 3-1. A big loss to the team was us not having two starters, Reid Priddy and Clay Stanley. Reid actually made the trip but the night we got here he got a call from his wife and she was going into pre-term labor. She's not due until august. Soooo, Reid boarded a plane the next morning and flew back to Huntington Beach to take care of her. And Clay Stanley didn't make this first trip with us, he got back from playing in Russia days before we left. Too quick of a turnaround for him i guess.

Needless to say, we didn't have all our horses. Not much you can about that. We will though when we play them in Wichita in a few weeks.

Today is Sunday, an off day for us. Its a beautiful day out, we practiced a bit earlier so now we are going to go wander around the city and try not to run into the Russian Mafia.....