Georgia Northwestern Lady Cats Fall To Bryan

Wednesday, September 05, 2012 - by Don Foley


With 20 geared up collegiate student-athletes on the other side of the net from Georgia Northwestern’s in their season-opener Wednesday night, you’d have to think numbers would play a part in deciding the debut match of the 2012 schedule. But the two-hour trip out of Georgia to Rhea County, Tennessee took much longer than the drive time it took to cover 100+ miles that Google Maps calculated.

It wouldn’t figure the time it takes to go from SEC spoilers just two years ago, through tough times just one year ago which put the program on temporary hiatus, to the re-unveiling of the Lady Bobcats Volleyball squad at GNTC in 2012.

Counting the drive up Highway 27, the trip to the match Wednesday night would take two years and two hours to see a half-dozen Lady Cats unload into Summers Gymnasium and prepare for Bryan College’s Lady Lions.

The four-year volleyball program had its hands full with the Lady Cats visiting Summers Gymnasium. In the end, the Lady Lions would take the match, 25-18, 25-13, 25-10.

After a successful three year run at the helm for former Lady Cats head coach Tricia Goodwin, there was almost really no other direction it was a logical choice to sign one of Georgia Northwestern’s top players in program history in alum Carrie Hawkins-Powell to be the new head coach.

Powell, a Ridgeland High School grad and tri-state area standout throughout her prep career made history from the bench on the prep ranks last season. The former six-foot setter was brought in a year ago to help guide Chickamauga, Georgia’s Oakwood Christian Academy’s high school varsity volleyball venture in North Georgia. Powell led the Lady Eagles to an 18-2 match mark in their 2011 campaign.

This August, Georgia Northwestern officially brought Powell back into the fold giving her the challenge of building up the Lady Cats program. The challenge officially started in Dayton, Tennessee Wednesday as the six first-year players would take on Bryan College and its squad of twenty.

Game one started off with the Lady Cats holding a 6-4 lead. A long run of Lady Lion conversions took the game to 18-10, Bryan. A quick timeout by Georgia Northwestern would lead to a long-standing service by Lady Cat Alysa Daniel (LFO) bringing the match to 18-17, Bryan.

The four-year power would regroup late in the first game running off five straight before Powell would call GNTC’s second timeout of the opening round at the 23-17 mark. The steady stream of 14 different subs would help Bryan win the first game, 25-18.

In game 2, the hosts would jump out to a 12-2 lead. Things would run even the rest of the way with some key touches by Candice McClain (LaFayette) late in the game to help keep the undersized and outnumbered Lady Cats moving up the scoreboard. Kill shots late in the game by the Lady Lion front line would put the game away, 25-13.

The Bobcat Six would hustle hard through a third road game in the match but fatigue would set in as Bryan would take game three, 25-10, in route to a sweep the Cats.

Also playing key roles in the first match of 2012 were Siouxanne Hawkins and Fallon Larmon (LaFayette), Kristine Huskey (Battlefield Parkway Christian), and Kayla Pierce (Gordon Lee). “We are a small team right now,” said Powell. “Our tallest player stands 5-foot-7. Our best hitter is barely over 5-foot-tall. We have a few challenges. But we really played well tonight. We’ll keep moving forward and keep improving.”

Georgia Northwestern competes in the N JCAA’s Region XVII covering the southeast. The Lady Cats (0-1, 0-3) will host Crown College at The R.A.C. for their home opener on Friday at 7 p.m.

For more information on Lady Cats Volleyball at Georgia Northwestern, contact the Office of Sports Information at 706.764.3813 or email to dfoley@gntc.edu. Georgia Northwestern has five campuses across Northwest Georgia directly serving nine different counties in the Peach State.

 

Bryan College    25           25           25

Georgia              18           13           10
Northwestern


Braves' Slugging Prospect Steals All-Star Show

SAN JOSE, Calif. -- Between the seventh and eighth innings of the California-Carolina League All-Star Game on Tuesday night, big, orange inflatable sofas were brought onto the field for a game of musical chairs. It was almost as entertaining as the display put on by the Carolina League in the fourth and fifth as the visiting team played musical chairs around the basepaths en route ... (click for more)

Chattanooga Area Swim League Standings, Results & Schedule

BLUE DIVISION Signal Mountain        4        0 Dalton                       3        1 ... (click for more)

Claude Ramsey To Retire As Deputy To The Governor

Governor Bill Haslam on Wednesday announced that Deputy to the Governor Claude Ramsey will retire at the end of August to spend more time with his wife, children and grandchildren in Chattanooga. He said the former Hamilton County assessor and then county mayor "has been integral to me on several key initiatives, including civil service reform, economic development efforts, workforce ... (click for more)

Westfield Gives Emotional Testimony About Fatal Shooting Of Friend Bernard Hughes

An emotional Timothy Westfield on Wednesday told a Criminal Court jury how he was shot and how his friend Bernard Hughes was murdered almost three years ago at the British Woods Apartments. The witness identified Harold Francis "Bam" Butler, III, 33, and John "Cut Throat" Simpson as the gunmen. Simpson pleaded guilty earlier to second-degree murder and is expected to be a ... (click for more)

Replace Airport Authority Board Members - And Response

The public needs to intervene on the absolutely absurd Wilson Air Waste (WWW) at the Chattanooga Metropolitan Airport.  What this all comes down to is our elected officials have appointed board members to oversee the budget and decision making at the airport, and they clearly do not respect public resources.   Contrary to the Airport Authority CEO’s statement ... (click for more)

Roy Exum: The Colonel: ‘Tell My Sons’

In the Broadway play, “The Civil War,” there is an emotional song called “Tell My Father,” the words that a dying Union soldier on a distant battlefield asked to be delivered when the other troops got back home. The reason Lt. Col. Mark Weber sang that very song with his oldest son Matt was because the highly-decorated officer was fighting Stage IV intestinal cancer at the ... (click for more)