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2023 Pakmen Beach Volleyball athletes and coaches
Beach Volleyball

Pakmen own the podium at OVA Beach Provincials

By DAVID WINER Special The Pakmen have drawn a line in the sand that may never be crossed. Competing at the Ontario Volleyball Association Beach Provincials, the Pakmen Volleyball Club prevailed with a flurry of gold medal performances that would confound the most optimistic prognosticator. “It was a record performance!” said ecstatic Pakmen director Kelly Smith. “These were the most Tier 1 gold medals at a Provincial Championship in OVA history.” Many of the 200 enthusiastic youngsters, who took to the six regulation sized courts this summer to participate in Elite Beach training, competed at an unworldly level resulting in 10 out of a possible 15 Tier 1 gold medal showings. “We are especially proud of head coach Jessy Satti after coming off a record-breaking indoor season,” said Smith. “His 18U boys won Provincials and Nationals, and he became the first coach to ever win three consecutive 18U national titles. Now, his male beach athletes performed so well, winning almost every single event, including several all-Pakmen finals, and in some cases, winning gold, silver and bronze. “Also, Arjun Selhi, who played for Jessy as an indoor player and was one of Jessy’s assistant coaches on the beach for three years is now in charge of the girls’ program and they also enjoyed a lot of success.” Assisting Satti on the boys’ side were Omar Abu Jazar, Saad Shaikh and Kadeem Clarke, while Selhi was assisted by Osemi Efosa. “Across the board on the boys and girls side we’ve had a tremendous amount of success, said Satti. “I give a lot of credit to the athletes, who make the conscious decision to stick with their teammates and do beach volleyball with the club. It creates a really good dynamic and team culture. There’s lots of opportunities for players to do different beach programs with other coaches, but I’ve found our athletes enjoy our beach program. It shows that the club is able to offer high quality programming 12 months of the year, and our results from indoor and beach proves that.” Setting the tone were Pakmen trailblazers Salma Abdelrazak on the girls’ side and the tandem of Misha Panasiouk and Aleksa Rakic on the boys’ side who worked overtime to collect two gold medals apiece. Panasiouk and Rakic mastered the 15U and 16U Tier 1 age groups that were chock-full of Pakmen teammates. “I think Misha and Aleks had a great summer. When they played up (16U) and won, it was definitely a special moment,” said Satti. “I think they showed people that the way beach volleyball is played can outweigh factors like size and athleticism. We make sure to teach beach the way we feel it should be played, and we’ve done that since the inception of our club. By getting athletes to buy into the training and structure, it puts them in a position to have a lot of success.” The 15U division, contested August 12-13 at Toronto’s Ashbridges Bay, was swept by Panasiouk and Rakic, followed by silver medalists Davis Hinshelwoods and Spencer Ham and bronze medalists Cooper Spehr and Jonathan Sousa. Pakmen inhabited two of the three podium placings in the 16U competition on August 5-6 with Yahia Elsayed and Chris Tang securing the bronze. The highlight of the tournament for both Panasiouk and Rakic was beating Elsayed and Tang in the 16U semi-final. “We lost to them in the final at an earlier tournament and they became the duo that we always wanted to play and beat,” explained Rakic. “While we lost to them in the first set, we fought through it and eventually won the third set 18-16.” “Even though we were ranked No. 1 entering the competition, the favorites were Yahia and Chris, who are both really good beach players and were also the tournament winners last year,” added Panasiouk. “We are also a year younger than them. But in a really close third game we were able to win, despite the fact the majority of the audience supported the opposing team.” A lot of planning had to go into Rakic and Panasiouk’s style of play considering there would be extra wear and tear on their bodies competing on back-to-back weekends. “Having to play multiple games a day with only about an hour of time for a break, it came down to how efficiently we used our time to rest and recover,” explained Rakic. “Sitting in the shade, and wearing towels and shirts to conserve our energy, was a must. After finishing each day we used our time to recover using ice, a roller and massage gun to prepare us for the next day and stay as fresh as possible.” However, the biggest reason for success, other than talent, is the rapport the two have developed. “Since Misha joined our rep team two years ago we’ve stayed close friends,” said Rakic, who attends Mississauga’s Applewood Secondary School. “Being able to connect easily from this friendship, it was easy to play together. All the time that we spent practicing on the beach and indoors made our basic skills better and helped us learn how to help each other through our struggles. If I’m struggling Misha is there to help me, and if Misha is struggling, I am there to help him.” Panasiouk, who attends Earl Haig in North York, says there’s a number of factors for their success. “The first is, of course, trust. We know that at the most crucial and stressful moment we will make the right decision that will lead the team to success. The second is communication. We are good at making our jobs easier and more efficient by communicating on the court; and the third is we are strong players in terms of set of skills no matter who the opponent serves, we know that we will definitely score a point.” “We are able to adapt and learn from our opponents,” added Rakic. “We understand how our opponents play and not only play to our strengths, but to their

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Emma Glagau u21 National Champion with her partner Ruby
Beach Volleyball

Pakmen bask in beach glory

By DAVID WINER It was just another day at the beach for members of the Pakmen Volleyball Club. Other than the pomp and circumstance associated with the annual Beach Nationals at Toronto’s Ashbridge’s Bay, Pakmen did what they usually do–dominate and win. It made little difference that the country’s best players were in attendance vying for glory. Before long, it became abundantly clear to those witnessing the spectacle, this was the unofficial coronation of Pakmen as Canada’s best beach volleyball club. Pakmen wore out the path to the podium, winning four gold medals on the men’s side and one in the women’s classification. Pakmen also came away with four silver medals and three bronze performances. With success still fresh in their minds, partners Misha Panasiouk and Aleksa Rakic, the 15U champions in Toronto, packed their bags and flew west to Vancouver the next week to win the 16U Nationals. “It was a perfect way to end the season,” said Pakmen head coach Jessy Satti. “We maintained our same level of success right to the end. It’s hard for teams to play their best at Nationals after a long, drawn out summer, because there’s so many tournaments leading up to it. So, for our athletes to have peaked and played their best at Nationals is definitely something to be proud of!” “As a coach we always have to be confident in our potential for success,” added Satti. “And we had a strong feeling after Provincials that we could find similar success at Nationals. But in the moment, when it all happens, (this amount of success) still feels like a surprise.” Asked if any of the matches surprised him, Satti said coaches must anticipate every challenge in advance. “There were no surprises that the kids and coaching staff weren’t prepared for,” he said. “At Nationals there are always strong teams from out of province that we haven’t seen before. So there were a couple of close matches that could have gone in any direction, but our teams pulled it off at the end.” One match that grabbed all the Pakmen coaches’ attention was the 17U boys’ final. Pakmen’s Wil Basilio and Parker Ocampo were out for revenge after losing to club rivals Chris Tautrims 1 and Brecken Morrison at the Provincials. And the older pairing of Basilio and Ocampo did manage to turn the tables this time around. “It was an amazing match,” said Satti. “It was competitive throughout, going to a third set. At that point the coaches got to be spectators and really enjoying the match itself. To us they were all Pakmen athletes so the outcome didn’t matter as long as both teams played to their potential. Both teams are so skilled so it became like a tactical chess match. That’s why the scores were close.” Ocampo attempted to describe the feelings running through his and Basilio’s minds entering the gold medal match after losing the previous week. “I wouldn’t say it was nerves and anxiety, but more along the lines of excitement knowing we would get another chance to play them and perform better than our first meeting, confidently knowing it would be a different outcome,” explained Ocampo. “We knew we didn’t play our best the first time around, as we were flat and disconnected, not to take away from Breck and Chris’s performance, as they played very well. It was only our second tournament together at provincials due to injury and other indoor volleyball commitments, so getting back to the way we were was going to take time.” “The loss at Provincials was tough,” continued Ocampo, “not because we lost to Breck and Chris, but because we didn’t show up that game. We felt we played poorly, and vowed Nationals were going to be different. We went back to the basics, building a game plan around each others’ strengths. And, most importantly, trusting what we learned from training with Pakmen.” With Basilio’s superlative blocking and Ocampo’s standout defense “we know what our responsibilities are and we trust each other’s abilities explicitly. Personally, the 6-foot-1 student at Oakville’s T.A. Blakelock “practiced breath work and started a guided meditation before games to keep me focused and relaxed.” After the celebration is over and Ocampo and Basilio are back on the ground, the duo will attend Volleyball Canada’s National Excellence Program later this month and rejoin Pakmen 18U Gold team in December. Taurims took the loss in stride admitting, “the other team was good and we just made a few more errors than we maybe wanted to in the final.” Still, Taurims and Morrison managed to make back-to-back gold medal matches in a memorable beach season. “I think we started the season with inconsistent play, but we were pretty good by the end of the season.” That included the Nationals where Taurims explained, “we were challenged in days two and three, but were able to push through it.” Along with the gold and silver medals captured by Pakmen in 17U boys’ play, teammates Tian Harcevic and Tyler Gibson just missed out on achieving a sweep, finishing fourth. Pakmen just missed out on another near sweep in 14U play with Jordan Low-Ring and Cameron Gibson winning gold, Robbie Whitelock and Devan Tarrant earning the silver, and Alex Hum and his partner capturing fourth place. Low-Ring and Gibson rarely worked up a sweat at Provincials dodging any three-game matches. While the competition was tougher at Nationals, the duo found ways to escape harm. “We had three matches extended to three sets,” said Low-Ring. “However, we felt it wasn’t the competition, but more Cameron and I playing poorly. But each time we fixed things and were able to finish strong.” Low-Ring also took great pride in the club’s showing in his age group. “I would definitely say it shows Pakmen’s player depth,” he said. “In previous tournaments it often came down to Pakmen teams eliminating other Pakmen duos. But, because of the extended competition from other provinces it opened the door for

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Teams

John Smith

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