CAPTAINS SIGN INTO YOUR ACCOUNT

FORGOT YOUR DETAILS?

AAH, WAIT, I REMEMBER NOW!
QUESTIONS? CALL: (631)-422-5555   LIVA   
  • LOGIN

Long Island Volleyball

  • HOME
  • BEACH LEAGUES
    • Cedar Beach Schedule & Fees
    • Jones Beach Schedule & Fees
    • Robert Moses Schedule & Fees
  • JUNIORS
  • INFORMATION
    • Contact Us
    • WEATHER
    • LEAGUE CALENDAR
    • DIRECTIONS
    • F.A.Q.
  • SCHEDULE
  • STANDINGS
REGISTER
  • Home
  • 2017
February 28, 2021

Year: 2017

New York Times

Thursday, 01 June 2017 by ataiwo473

AS if he were about to propose, Brian Hahs, an accountant from Wantagh, 35, dropped to one knee on the sand. Carolyn Barton, 36, an audiologist from Wantagh, watched Mr. Hahs stretch out his arms and clasp his hands together. But this is only partly a tale of love on the beach. What made Ms. Barton smile was the wallop Mr. Hahs then gave the volleyball as it arced toward him over the net.

”Really nice,” Ms. Barton, Mr. Hahs’s fiancée, yelled as the rally on court 8 at the beach volleyball stadium at Jones Beach State Park continued and then ended with a spike point for their free agent team. The six players on their side of the net rotated clockwise, sand sifting between their toes.

As the sun dipped on the horizon, it was Ms. Barton’s turn to serve. On the first try, it sailed into the net. ”Nice try, dear,” Mr. Hahs called out. Then, with a bit more oomph, the volleyball whooshed to the other side. Mr. Hahs cast Ms. Barton a loving glance. ”It’s almost like going on vacation playing on the beach,” Mr. Hahs had said earlier, standing on the sideline. ”It’s like another world to get away from my desk, my clients.”

Lured by the surf, the sand, summer, the competition and the cavorting, beach volleyball is booming in popularity on the Island. Four evenings a week since mid-May, 64 teams in the Long Island Volleyball Association, a private league, are playing three games of 21 points each at Jones Beach, competing against different teams each week. In this sandbox for grown-ups, some jiggle between shots to music cranking from loudspeakers. Others check out the social scene, clamoring for mates as well as points.

Just down the shore at Cedar Beach in Babylon, hundreds of players gather on 22 courts, where, on Monday evenings, a disc jockey adds to the beach party atmosphere. The league there is divided into recreational, intermediate and advanced. ”You don’t have to be the greatest volleyball player in the world to play,” said Joseph Strining, the executive director of the league.

Mr. Strining, 39, of Oak Beach was living in Long Beach in 1998 and working as a copy editor when he decided to organize an adult recreational league rather than rely on pickup games with his buddies. That first summer, he organized 28 teams at Cedar Beach. The following year, he leased the former roller-skating rink from the New York State park system at Jones Beach. The concrete was replaced with sand. With lights for night play already in place, the volleyball games could continue on warm summer evenings long after the sun went down. He set up six courts.

”We want to make them feel like they are playing volleyball on a cruise ship,” said Mr. Strining, who now has a staff of 12 to help keep the games running smoothly. ”It’s huge stress relief.” Last year, the roster swelled to 650 teams during two nine-week sessions at both beaches. This summer, with two courts added at Jones Beach, the league has close to 800 teams.

”It’s a very social sport,” Mr. Strining said, recalling how he first noticed the woman who later became his fiancée, Tracy Longo of Seaford, because she was so bubbly on the court. ”It’s one of the few sports where men and women can actually play together and enjoy the game together.” Players range from 18 to their 50’s, with an average age of 27.

Though the league boasted its first wedding last June — Kathy and Curtis Lee of Hicksville even had a wedding cake topper made with beach sand, a homemade volleyball net and ball for their wedding at Larkfield Manor in Northport — the emphasis is on sport, not hooking up. Volleyball on the sand is a workout. Standings are kept, with an additional point going to a team for each victory.

”Come playoff time, everyone is serious,” Mr. Strining said. ”They progress. They become better players.”

But even those not looking for love can be as concerned with socializing as winning. Several teams are sponsored by local companies like NBTY (formerly Nature’s Bounty) and Arrow Electronics; others are groups of friends or free agents.

Members of a team called Lost in Space have been playing together at Jones Beach for the last three summers. After winning all three games during the first of four time slots on a recent evening, they hung around the sidelines, swapping stories and sipping drinks from a cooler. ”It’s an excuse to get together after work and come to the beach,” said Ed Hearn, an engineer from Commack, who plays alongside his wife, Linda, a dental hygienist. ”You don’t get to see everybody all the time. This was convenient.”

Gail Mazzella, 34, of Huntington picked up her husband, Mario, 37, at the Hicksville station from his job as an information technology director in Manhattan to join their friends on the sand. Even after a bad day at the office, it was worth the trek. ”By the time I get here, I am in such a different mood,” said Ms. Mazzella, who works as an information technology director in Hauppauge. ”It’s a good time.”

For the last four years, Mike Wagner, 48, of Ronkonkoma has considered volleyball a relaxing break after putting in a full day as a real estate broker in Bellmore. ”I’m not a baker,” Mr. Wagner said. ”To be on the beach I have to be able to do something or I can’t go. This is ideal.”

Like many players, after the game Mr. Hahs and Ms. Barton stroll the boardwalk, go to the beach and sometimes stop for ice cream. Though they didn’t meet on the court, playing beach volleyball together, they agreed, helped nurture their relationship. ”We got to know each other and got to see each other in this kind of nature and realized that we are the same,” Ms. Barton said.

Because of the surge in popularity, Mr. Strining said, he plans to take his volleyball league indoors next winter to a central Long Island location, where he plans to create a beach with a roof on top.

Melody Millando, 28, a doctoral student in clinical psychology from Bethpage, plays volleyball year round but prefers the sand. ”There is more freedom to go after the ball,” Ms. Millando said. ”Here we can attack the ball, go after the ball. You can dive without worrying about scraping the knees. I have more injuries indoors than outdoors.”

On hot summer days, Theresa Bevilacqua, 23, a student from Farmingdale, and buddies from her high school days bask in the sun at Jones Beach. Come evening, the team that calls itself X-treme puts on T-shirts marked ”A Volleyball Life. (Nothing else matters.)” and head for the sand courts. Then the spiking and passing in their intermediate-level volleyball league begins.

Ms. Bevilacqua summed up the scene. ”I’ve always liked volleyball,” she said. ”It’s a great ending to a good day at the beach.” ¦

news
Read more
  • Published in News
No Comments

Having a Ball at the Beach

Monday, 01 May 2017 by ataiwo473

RUSSELL Schwint stands up and his face is covered in sand. He shakes his head and sand falls out of the whiskers that surround his smile. He brushes himself off with his hands and makes a sound with his lips as if he is blowing into a tuba to get the grains out of his mouth.
Pbbbtthhhh! No, Schwint is not some 90-pound weakling who just had sand kicked in his face by a bully. He’s a beach volleyball player with the Long Island Volleyball Association, one of nearly 6,000 members of the organization that provides advanced players and beginners with a chance to spend evenings at the beach, get a good workout, and, if they’re lucky, get a mouthful of sand. After all, what’s the point of playing volleyball on the soft sand if you’re not going to dive after the ball every chance you get?

“It’s a lot of fun and it’s an inexpensive workout,” said Schwint, who plays on a coed beginner team of six called Dunesday. “Over the river, through the woods, I’d move heaven and earth to play here.”

Fortunately, the effort isn’t quite so dramatic. Schwint, who lives in Holbrook, need only drive to Jones Beach, one of two locations on Long Island where Association teams play (action also takes place at Cedar Beach in Babylon). The courts at Jones Beach are situated at Parking Field 4, right behind the miniature golf course where the old roller rink used to stand. There are six courts and, because there are lights, games begin at 6:45, 7:40, 8:35 and 9:30 every Monday through Thursday night. Cedar Beach games are held on 20 courts at 6:30 on Monday nights.

With the games held at night, more players are able to compete. There are hundreds who sit behind desks in offices in Manhattan all day long, then instead of commuting home they travel to the beach to play volleyball for an hour or two, enjoying the cool breezes and party atmosphere that surround the game.

It’s the ultimate in stress relief.

Nicole Maurice of Williston Park, for example, works as a toxicologist for the medical examiner’s office in Westchester County but comes to Jones Beach once a week to play volleyball. She has been participating in the sport of indoor volleyball for almost 20 years and is in her second year playing the beach version.

“You have to get used to running in the sand, and the wind is a factor,” she said, explaining the differences between indoor and beach volleyball. “The sand makes it harder to move, but it’s easier to dive.”

Four years ago, there was no place for beginning beach volleyball players to play on Long Island. There were games being played at Long Beach and other areas, but those were for seasoned players and it was almost impossible for a novice to break into the sport.

Joe Strining was one of those advanced players diving and spiking at Long Beach, but then he decided to pursue his dream of starting a beach volleyball league. In 1998, the Long Island Volleyball Association began with 28 teams at Cedar Beach. The following year the courts at Jones Beach were opened and membership jumped to 120 teams. Last year there were 400 teams and this year the league is filled to the scheduling brim with nearly 600 teams.

The 600 teams are divided into three levels — recreational, intermediate and advanced — and five divisions — coed teams of six, four and two players each and men’s teams of four and two. Players range from age 15 to over 50, and most of the players are at the recreational level.

“There were always advanced leagues for strong volleyball players,” Strining said, “but not everybody had a chance to get better. Now it doesn’t matter if you’re the greatest volleyball player or not. We provide them with organization and fun, and when you combine the two it makes everybody, including myself, very happy.”

AND it’s a lot of fun even for those who don’t play. On warm summer nights the boardwalk at Jones Beach is packed with people, many of whom take time out to sit and watch a few games of volleyball. At Cedar Beach there is a disc jockey playing music and a line of grills waiting for the games to end and the cooking to begin. At Jones Beach the music is just as loud, and all along the perimeter of the courts are people dancing and chatting while drinking from plastic cups.

“It’s like a sandbox for adults,” Strining said. “It’s meant to be a nice, fun place to come.”

Strining’s professional background is in marketing, so when he opened the league and started looking for players, he had to think hard. He sent letters to human resource departments of hundreds of companies on Long Island and in the city and received a tremendous response (about three-quarters of the teams in the association are made up of players who work together). He went to various beaches and put fliers on windshields, an activity that got him thrown out of a few places.

“I wanted to try to find the market, but in the process realized I was creating the market,” Strining said. “Our next goal is to expand to either an indoor facility or find another area to play on Long Island.”

Players can join the league as a team for a price of $425 a team with an extra $15 per player. That works out to about $57.50 a player for eight weeks of action and a week of playoffs, after-session parties, T-shirts and an identification card that gets discounts at various local stores and pubs.

Individuals can join for $90 and be placed on a team, which is what happened to Janna Jachniewicz of Hicksville. Her mother saw an ad in a newspaper and told her about it, so Jachniewicz made a phone call and showed up.

“Luckily they put me on a good team and I’ve stayed with them,” she said, adding that she plays for three teams in the LIVA along with weekend tournaments around the country. “I even talked my sister Tara into joining this year. She’s never played before, but I told her it’s a fun place to come and relax and meet a lot of nice people.” And get an occasional mouthful of sand.

For information on playing in the Long Island Volleyball Association, call 631-422-5555 or visit https://longislandvolleyball.com1/.

news
Read more
  • Published in News
No Comments

Recent Posts

  • New York Times

    AS if he were about to propose, Brian Hahs, an ...
  • Having a Ball at the Beach

    RUSSELL Schwint stands up and his face is cover...
  • Fun in the Sun – Five Top Summer Fun Ideas

    BY KATIE STRANG Newsday Staff Writer Tired of h...

Recent Comments

    Archives

    • June 2017
    • May 2017
    • April 2015

    Categories

    • News

    Meta

    • Log in
    • Entries feed
    • Comments feed
    • WordPress.org

    Featured Posts

    • New York Times

      0 comments
    • Having a Ball at the Beach

      0 comments
    • Fun in the Sun – Five Top Summer Fun Ideas

      0 comments

    QUICK LINKS

    • Captains Login
    • Forgot My Password?
    • My Leagues
    • T-shirt Form
    • How to Register
    • 🔔 Get Alerts
    • Rulebook
    • Announcements

    NEWSLETTER SIGNUP

    By subscribing to our mailing list you will always be update with the latest news from us.

    Your personal details are strictly for our use, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

    GET IN TOUCH

    T (631)-422-5555
    Email: update@longislandvolleyball.com

    Long Island Volleyball Association
    PO BOX 145 SAYVILLE, NY 11782

    • GET SOCIAL
    Long Island Volleyball

    © 2020 All rights reserved. Made with ❤️ In New York

    TOP