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Volleyball

Syracuse enters 2021 season aiming for ‘postseason’ success

T.J. Shaw | Staff Photographer

With Polina Shemanova and Marina Markova returning to the lineup after missing the spring season, SU volleyball hopes to make its first NCAA Tournament since 2018.

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Last season, Syracuse volleyball had two matchups canceled and wore masks during all games. The Orange were even played without two of its stars, outside hitter Polina Shemanova and middle blocker Marina Markova, due to visa complications from Russia.

The Orange finished 7-9, including a 7-1 home record, but recorded seven losses on the road and one loss in a neutral site by the end of the season.

This year, however, Shemanova and Markova are back on the court with eased COVID-19 restrictions. Syracuse, who was predicted to finish sixth in conference play by the Atlantic Coast Conference coaches poll, will look to improve upon its record from last season and find consistency in its play.

SU’s season-opener is on Friday, Aug. 27, with a doubleheader against the University of Buffalo and UConn in the Women’s Building, followed by another nonconference game against UAlbany on Saturday.



Leonid Yelin, who is entering his 10th season as the SU volleyball head coach, expects a slow start from the team but hopes that wins will come from focusing on certain aspects of the game.

“I can’t expect right off the bat we’re going to do everything great,” Yelin said. “(We) want to win not just somehow, but win by doing the right things.”

The Orange played strictly ACC opponents due to a modified schedule last season, but they will travel out of conference this season. SU faces 12 nonconference teams before ACC play.

Yelin hopes the start of the schedule will prepare the team for conference play. SU has to play well against all teams, whether opponents are out of the conference or sitting at the top or bottom of the ACC, he said.

In order for a successful season this year, Syracuse will require stellar play from senior setter Elena Karakasi, who Yelin called the “quarterback” of the team. In the 2020 season, Karakasi led the team with 467 assists. The next highest player was junior setter Lauren Woodford with 91.

“My personal goal is to get us to play really good volleyball as a team and go as high as we can in the ACC and win the title,” Karakasi said. “From there, go (to the) postseason.”

SU will also receive a boost with Shemanova and Markova back in the lineup for the fall. Without Shemanova throughout the spring season, the team had no primary hitter and therefore struggled offensively. In 2019, Shemanova averaged a team-best 5.16 kills per set and averaged 5.80 points per set. She also led the team in digs with 268. Markova, who had 29 blocks in her limited 2020 fall season, will give SU a defensive boost.

Junior middle blocker Abby Casiano, who was a crucial part of the front line, will also return this season. Casiano led the team with 64 blocks in the 2020 season and was second behind now-Coastal Carolina player Ella Saada in kills with 111.

Casiano, as well as junior Izzy Plummer, traveled to Puerto Rico for the Puerto Rican National Team development camp this summer, which Casiano said will help her adjust to faster-paced ACC games.

The Orange also added four freshmen — Peyton O’Brien, Riley Hoffman, Raina Hughes and Diana Akopova — to the roster during the offseason, all of whom are adjusting to Yelin’s system and don’t have any defined roles yet.

SU hasn’t made the NCAA tournament since 2018, recording losing records in the 2019 and 2020 seasons. Still, if the Orange can improve on its road record and find more consistency in its rotations, they could be poised for a successful season, Yelin said.

— Contributing Writer Matt Hassan contributed reporting to this story.





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