fbpx
Wikipedia

Al Scates

Allen Edward Scates (born June 9, 1939) is a former American volleyball player and volleyball coach, who was head coach of the UCLA Bruins for 48 years. Scates is the winningest volleyball coach in the history of the NCAA, and the 19 NCAA titles the Bruins won during his tenure ties him for the most NCAA titles won by a coach in a single sport with Arkansas' John McDonnell (Indoor Track and Field). Scates' teams won collegiate volleyball championships in five different decades. In addition to coaching, Scates was a physical education instructor at Horace Mann and Hawthorne, two of the elementary schools in the Beverly Hills Unified School District.

Al Scates
Personal information
NationalityAmerican
BornJune 9, 1939 (1939-06-09) (age 83)
Los Angeles, California
Alma materUCLA
OccupationVolleyball coach
Spouse(s)Sue Scates
Medal record

Early life and athletic career

Scates grew up in Santa Monica in Los Angeles and attended Westchester High School.[1] At 6 ft 2, he was tall and athletic, and played both basketball and football in high school. When he graduated he went to Santa Monica College, majoring in physical education with the goal of coaching football at the high school level. He played football at Santa Monica College, and was an undersized center on the school's basketball team.[2]

Scates' interest in volleyball began when his college football coach required his players to try out for a volleyball team to stay in shape during the off season. Scates did not make the team roster, but a teammate of his on the basketball team not only made the team, but was the best player on the floor. “So I asked him where he learned to play,” Scates said. “He told me State Beach in Santa Monica. So I decided to learn how to play.” Scates was soon a regular at State Beach.[3]

In 1959 Scates transferred to UCLA. Though a junior with only a couple years of experience, he made the school's volleyball team as a walk on.[2] A left handed outside hitter, he made a particularly effective right front. The team played several of the college club teams, but the major event of the year was the USVBA Open National tournament. Scates was selected as an All American, and was team captain for the Bruins in 1960 and 1961.[3] From the USVBA Nationals he was selected as a member of the U.S. National team. Meanwhile, on the beach he earned a AAA rating,[citation needed] often teaming with Bob Mendoza, a San Diego Hall of Champions inductee.

Early coaching

At the age of 24 Scates moved from player to coach. When the UCLA volleyball coach took a sabbatical, he offered Scates the job. Scates was surprised but accepted. He then went to meet with Athletic Director Wilbur Johns. "He didn't even tell me to sit down," Scates recalled. "I told him that I cannot accept a salary for coaching volleyball because I wanted to be in the Olympics in 1964, and at that time if you coached a sport for money or played for money you were not considered an amateur and couldn't participate in the Olympics. "When he heard that he jumped up, shook my hand, and said, 'Congratulations, son, you're hired.'"[4]

The program was run on a shoestring budget. In Scates’ first year the volleyball team was allotted $100.[4] The team uniforms were the discarded old uniforms from the basketball team. Shoes, socks, and even the entry fees to tournaments were all paid for by Scates and the players.[3] In his first year in 1963 the team finished with a 26-3 record, and placed second at the USVBA national championship. Scates still competed for the U.S. national team as an outside hitter but missed the cut for the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo.[4] Scates' Bruins won a USVBA national title in 1965, and again in 1967.[5]

In 1970 the NCAA elevated Men's volleyball to a championship sport. In the first sanctioned championship Scates and the Bruins swept Long Beach State University to win the first NCAA title in volleyball. They would win the next two years as well, and win six of the first seven NCAA Championships held. From 1981 to 1984, Scates' teams won four consecutive national championships, the longest such streak by any men's volleyball team. UCLA is the only team that has won more than two consecutive championships, holding streaks of at least 3 national championships 3 times.

Coaching style

Scates was highly competitive both as a player and a coach, and he designed his practices to underscore competition and intensity.[4] Practices moved at a high pace, with high repetitions and little time between drills. "I ran shorter drills and quicker, and I didn’t stop the drills to explain things very much. I just tried to coach and keep things going at the same time."[3] John Wooden was a major influence on Scates and eventually a lifelong friend.[3] "I used to sit up there and watch him when we weren’t practicing. I learned a lot from that. I liked how he changed drills very quickly. He didn’t have any down time. And then I read a book he wrote in 1965 called 'Practical Modern Basketball.'"[3]

The Bruins volleyball team had an "A" squad and a developmental squad. A large blue curtain separated the two practice courts. Players were in constant competition to stay on the "A" squad. Scates used a scoring system for his players during the practices, and their position on the team depended on the points they were scoring in practice. The coaches with the development squad could recommend players to move up, and Scates would check scores and move an "A" court player down. The scoring system allowed the players to know there was nothing personal in the choices being made. John Speraw, a former player and current head coach at UCLA, commented "the way he managed to make objective decisions was to stay fairly separate from the players. It was never personal. And once you graduated, he enjoyed the relationship that developed with his players."[4] He highly valued competitiveness in a player, and wanted to go into matches with players that hated to lose. UCLA alumnus Karch Kiraly noted a common thread in the players around him at UCLA: "He recruited people that were like I was. We absolutely hated to lose and loved to win, and that's what the Bruins were like. They were a reflection of Al, and Al wanted to win every single match, every single season."[4]

Like Wooden, Scates established himself as an innovator, changing a deliberate game to the fast-paced sport it is today. "Until the late ’60s, the game was a very slow game,” Scates said. "You didn’t try to deceive anybody. You just tried to set a high ball to the outside and if your hitter was better than the blockers you scored a point. By the late 1960s we started setting very quick here at UCLA. We started running an offense that is still being run today.”[3] Said USC coach Bill Ferguson “He is responsible for so much of our sport’s development that we will never be able to fathom what he did to promote our game. He is the best in-game tactician there ever was.”[6]

Accomplishments

Scates left the UCLA Bruins with a career record of 1,239-290, more matches than any collegiate coach. The only coach who approaches it in volleyball is Penn State women's volleyball coach Russ Rose. In 37 years, Rose has won seven NCAA titles and compiled a record of 1246–198. Scates holds the best winning percentage of all coaches in all sports.[7] No other program at UCLA in the last 50 years has won as many national titles as Scates' volleyball teams.[2] Sometimes referred to as "the other Wizard of Westwood," he won more NCAA titles than John Wooden.[7] Twice his teams won national titles three years in a row.[7]

Scates has played a role in the development of many volleyball players. Through his program Scates has coached 78 All Americans, 44 U.S. national team members, 27 Olympians, 7 players that were chosen as NCAA Player of the Year, and launched dozens of coaching careers.[1][4] Coaching positions held by former Scates' players include the former and current Bruins women's team coaches, Andy Banachowski and Mike Sealy. Prominent beach volleyball players that played indoor for Scates include Jim Menges, Sinjin Smith, Randy Stoklos, Ricci Luyties and Karch Kiraly.

In 2006, the Bruins and Scates won their last national championship with a win over Penn State University at Penn State's Rec Hall. It was Scates' 19th national championship. Scates lists the 2006 UCLA Bruins as one of his favorites, who began the season 12-12, but closed with a 14-game winning streak. The 12 losses were the most ever for an NCAA Championship team, and the second most for the Bruins in a single season under Scates.

Scates was selected NCAA coach of the year 1984, 1987 and 1993.[7] His teams hold ten NCAA records, including most consecutive victories (48), most consecutive home wins (83) and most consecutive tournament wins (14). He was inducted into the International Volleyball Hall of Fame in 1993.[7]

Retirement

After coaching the Bruins for 50 seasons, Scates retired at the end of the 2012 season. He is the most successful coach in the history of the sport.[8] He has been inducted into the Hall of Fame of a number of volleyball organizations, including The American Volleyball Coaches Association, The UCLA Athletics, The California Beach Volleyball and the Volleyball Halls of Fame. He was the first active coach inducted into the UCLA and Volleyball Halls of Fame.[8] In retirement, he offered "It is a privilege to coach the fine men that have participated and continue to compete for UCLA volleyball. I have enjoyed being a continuous member of UCLA volleyball since I walked onto the team as a junior in 1959."[8] Said Penn State's Russ Rose “I look at the 19 national championships and shake my head. I can understand 50 years at UCLA because they don’t have winter. But the number of great players who have played at UCLA and the bond they all have for each other and the university is the greatest contribution he has made to the sport. That’s his lasting legacy.”[6]

Personal life

Scates is married. He and his wife have three children. His son, David, is a Physical Education and Health and Guidance teacher at Herbert Hoover High School in Glendale, CA. He also has two daughters, Leslie and Tracy, and four grandchildren. Three which from Leslie and one from David. Scates is on the Board of Directors of the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA). He was featured in the January 2007 issue of Coaching Volleyball Magazine, the official magazine of the AVCA.

Scates was part of the Alpha Psi chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma International Fraternity while he matriculated at UCLA.

Awards and recognition

  • In 2003, Scates was enshrined in the UCLA Hall of Fame.
  • In 2004, Scates was enshrined in the American Volleyball Coaches Association (AVCA) Hall of Fame.
  • Scates has been named Coach of the Year five times: 1984, 1987, 1993, 1996, 1998.

Championships

UCLA has won the following Volleyball Championships under Scates.

  • USVBA (2): 1965, 1967
  • NCAA (19): 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974, 1975, 1976, 1979, 1981, 1982, 1983, 1984, 1987, 1989, 1993, 1995, 1996, 1998, 2000, 2006

Head coaching record

Statistics overview
Season Team Overall Conference Standing Postseason
UCLA (Mountain Pacific Sports Federation) (1963–2010)
1963 UCLA 26-3 2 USVBA 2nd Place
1964 UCLA 23-4 1 USVBA 2nd Place
1965 UCLA 24-2 1 USVBA Champions
1966 UCLA 25-3 1 USVBA 2nd Place
1967 UCLA 23-3 1 USVBA Champions
1968 UCLA 24-5 2 USVBA 4th Place
1969 UCLA 27-3 2 USVBA 2nd Place
1970 UCLA 24-1 2 NCAA Champions
1971 UCLA 29-1 2 NCAA Champions
1972 UCLA 27-7 2 NCAA Champions
1973 UCLA 21-8 4 Regional Runner-Up
1974 UCLA 30-5 3 NCAA Champions
1975 UCLA 27-8 4 NCAA Champions
1976 UCLA 15-2 1 NCAA Champions
1977 UCLA 19-4 2 Regional Runner-Up
1978 UCLA 21-3 1 NCAA Runner-Up
1979 UCLA 30-0 1 NCAA Champions
1980 UCLA 32-2 1 NCAA Runner-Up
1981 UCLA 32-3 2 NCAA Champions
1982 UCLA 29-0 1 NCAA Champions
1983 UCLA 27-4 1 NCAA Champions
1984 UCLA 38-0 1 NCAA Champions
1985 UCLA 32-8 3 Regional Runner-Up
1986 UCLA 30-9 2 Regional Runner-Up
1987 UCLA 38-3 1 NCAA Champions
1988 UCLA 28-10 4 First round
1989 UCLA 29-5 T-1 NCAA Champions
1990 UCLA 23-5 2 Regional Runner-Up
1991 UCLA 16-9 1 Regional Runner-Up
1992 UCLA 17-7 2 Regional Runner-Up
1993 UCLA 24-3 1 NCAA Champions
1994 UCLA 27-2 1 NCAA Runner-Up
1995 UCLA 31-1 1 NCAA Champions
1996 UCLA 26-5 1 NCAA Champions
1997 UCLA 24-5 1 NCAA Runner-Up
1998 UCLA 28-4 1 NCAA Champions
1999 UCLA 20-7 3 First round
2000 UCLA 29-5 1 NCAA Champions
2001 UCLA 24-8 1 NCAA Runner-Up
2002 UCLA 25-7 T-5 First round
2003 UCLA 15-14 9
2004 UCLA 24-6 3 Regional semifinals
2005 UCLA 26-6 2 NCAA Runner-Up
2006 UCLA 26-12 7 NCAA Champions
2007 UCLA 19-11 5 First round
2008 UCLA 17-14 5 First round
2009 UCLA 14-16 8 First round
2010 UCLA 16-14 7 First round
2011 UCLA 16-15 8 First round
2012 UCLA 22-8 5 First round
UCLA: 1239-290
Total: 1239-290

      National champion         Postseason invitational champion  
      Conference regular season champion         Conference regular season and conference tournament champion
      Division regular season champion       Division regular season and conference tournament champion
      Conference tournament champion

References

  1. ^ a b "UCLA Tribute Video: Al Scates". April 9, 2012. Archived from the original on December 19, 2021. Retrieved May 17, 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Boaz, Calvin. "Al Scates' Retirement: College Volleyball's Story of the Year for 2012". Retrieved May 17, 2017.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Reid, Scott (April 20, 2012). "UCLA's Al Scates a volleyball innovator". The Orange County Register. Retrieved May 17, 2017.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Elliott, Helene (January 20, 2012). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on January 22, 2012. Retrieved May 17, 2017.
  5. ^ Arambawattage Rodrigo (1981). (PDF) (Thesis). The Ohio State University. p. 56-60, 71-73, 106. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 16, 2011. Retrieved April 30, 2010.
  6. ^ a b Yoon, Peter (October 26, 2012). . NCAA.com. Archived from the original on May 8, 2012. Retrieved May 17, 2017.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Al Scates Biography". International Volleyball Hall of Fame. Retrieved May 18, 2017.
  8. ^ a b c Yoon, Peter (May 11, 2011). "UCLA's Al Scates to retire in 2012". ESPNLosAngeles.com. Retrieved May 17, 2017.

External links

  • UCLA.edu spotlight on Scates
  • American Volleyball Coaches Association
  • Instructional Volleyball Videos and Drills by Al Scates

scates, allen, edward, scates, born, june, 1939, former, american, volleyball, player, volleyball, coach, head, coach, ucla, bruins, years, scates, winningest, volleyball, coach, history, ncaa, ncaa, titles, bruins, during, tenure, ties, most, ncaa, titles, co. Allen Edward Scates born June 9 1939 is a former American volleyball player and volleyball coach who was head coach of the UCLA Bruins for 48 years Scates is the winningest volleyball coach in the history of the NCAA and the 19 NCAA titles the Bruins won during his tenure ties him for the most NCAA titles won by a coach in a single sport with Arkansas John McDonnell Indoor Track and Field Scates teams won collegiate volleyball championships in five different decades In addition to coaching Scates was a physical education instructor at Horace Mann and Hawthorne two of the elementary schools in the Beverly Hills Unified School District Al ScatesPersonal informationNationalityAmericanBornJune 9 1939 1939 06 09 age 83 Los Angeles CaliforniaAlma materUCLAOccupationVolleyball coachSpouse s Sue ScatesMedal record Men s volleyballRepresenting the United StatesPan American Games1967 Winnipeg Team Contents 1 Early life and athletic career 2 Early coaching 3 Coaching style 4 Accomplishments 5 Retirement 6 Personal life 7 Awards and recognition 8 Championships 9 Head coaching record 10 References 11 External linksEarly life and athletic career EditScates grew up in Santa Monica in Los Angeles and attended Westchester High School 1 At 6 ft 2 he was tall and athletic and played both basketball and football in high school When he graduated he went to Santa Monica College majoring in physical education with the goal of coaching football at the high school level He played football at Santa Monica College and was an undersized center on the school s basketball team 2 Scates interest in volleyball began when his college football coach required his players to try out for a volleyball team to stay in shape during the off season Scates did not make the team roster but a teammate of his on the basketball team not only made the team but was the best player on the floor So I asked him where he learned to play Scates said He told me State Beach in Santa Monica So I decided to learn how to play Scates was soon a regular at State Beach 3 In 1959 Scates transferred to UCLA Though a junior with only a couple years of experience he made the school s volleyball team as a walk on 2 A left handed outside hitter he made a particularly effective right front The team played several of the college club teams but the major event of the year was the USVBA Open National tournament Scates was selected as an All American and was team captain for the Bruins in 1960 and 1961 3 From the USVBA Nationals he was selected as a member of the U S National team Meanwhile on the beach he earned a AAA rating citation needed often teaming with Bob Mendoza a San Diego Hall of Champions inductee Early coaching EditAt the age of 24 Scates moved from player to coach When the UCLA volleyball coach took a sabbatical he offered Scates the job Scates was surprised but accepted He then went to meet with Athletic Director Wilbur Johns He didn t even tell me to sit down Scates recalled I told him that I cannot accept a salary for coaching volleyball because I wanted to be in the Olympics in 1964 and at that time if you coached a sport for money or played for money you were not considered an amateur and couldn t participate in the Olympics When he heard that he jumped up shook my hand and said Congratulations son you re hired 4 The program was run on a shoestring budget In Scates first year the volleyball team was allotted 100 4 The team uniforms were the discarded old uniforms from the basketball team Shoes socks and even the entry fees to tournaments were all paid for by Scates and the players 3 In his first year in 1963 the team finished with a 26 3 record and placed second at the USVBA national championship Scates still competed for the U S national team as an outside hitter but missed the cut for the 1964 Summer Olympics in Tokyo 4 Scates Bruins won a USVBA national title in 1965 and again in 1967 5 In 1970 the NCAA elevated Men s volleyball to a championship sport In the first sanctioned championship Scates and the Bruins swept Long Beach State University to win the first NCAA title in volleyball They would win the next two years as well and win six of the first seven NCAA Championships held From 1981 to 1984 Scates teams won four consecutive national championships the longest such streak by any men s volleyball team UCLA is the only team that has won more than two consecutive championships holding streaks of at least 3 national championships 3 times Coaching style EditScates was highly competitive both as a player and a coach and he designed his practices to underscore competition and intensity 4 Practices moved at a high pace with high repetitions and little time between drills I ran shorter drills and quicker and I didn t stop the drills to explain things very much I just tried to coach and keep things going at the same time 3 John Wooden was a major influence on Scates and eventually a lifelong friend 3 I used to sit up there and watch him when we weren t practicing I learned a lot from that I liked how he changed drills very quickly He didn t have any down time And then I read a book he wrote in 1965 called Practical Modern Basketball 3 The Bruins volleyball team had an A squad and a developmental squad A large blue curtain separated the two practice courts Players were in constant competition to stay on the A squad Scates used a scoring system for his players during the practices and their position on the team depended on the points they were scoring in practice The coaches with the development squad could recommend players to move up and Scates would check scores and move an A court player down The scoring system allowed the players to know there was nothing personal in the choices being made John Speraw a former player and current head coach at UCLA commented the way he managed to make objective decisions was to stay fairly separate from the players It was never personal And once you graduated he enjoyed the relationship that developed with his players 4 He highly valued competitiveness in a player and wanted to go into matches with players that hated to lose UCLA alumnus Karch Kiraly noted a common thread in the players around him at UCLA He recruited people that were like I was We absolutely hated to lose and loved to win and that s what the Bruins were like They were a reflection of Al and Al wanted to win every single match every single season 4 Like Wooden Scates established himself as an innovator changing a deliberate game to the fast paced sport it is today Until the late 60s the game was a very slow game Scates said You didn t try to deceive anybody You just tried to set a high ball to the outside and if your hitter was better than the blockers you scored a point By the late 1960s we started setting very quick here at UCLA We started running an offense that is still being run today 3 Said USC coach Bill Ferguson He is responsible for so much of our sport s development that we will never be able to fathom what he did to promote our game He is the best in game tactician there ever was 6 Accomplishments EditScates left the UCLA Bruins with a career record of 1 239 290 more matches than any collegiate coach The only coach who approaches it in volleyball is Penn State women s volleyball coach Russ Rose In 37 years Rose has won seven NCAA titles and compiled a record of 1246 198 Scates holds the best winning percentage of all coaches in all sports 7 No other program at UCLA in the last 50 years has won as many national titles as Scates volleyball teams 2 Sometimes referred to as the other Wizard of Westwood he won more NCAA titles than John Wooden 7 Twice his teams won national titles three years in a row 7 Scates has played a role in the development of many volleyball players Through his program Scates has coached 78 All Americans 44 U S national team members 27 Olympians 7 players that were chosen as NCAA Player of the Year and launched dozens of coaching careers 1 4 Coaching positions held by former Scates players include the former and current Bruins women s team coaches Andy Banachowski and Mike Sealy Prominent beach volleyball players that played indoor for Scates include Jim Menges Sinjin Smith Randy Stoklos Ricci Luyties and Karch Kiraly In 2006 the Bruins and Scates won their last national championship with a win over Penn State University at Penn State s Rec Hall It was Scates 19th national championship Scates lists the 2006 UCLA Bruins as one of his favorites who began the season 12 12 but closed with a 14 game winning streak The 12 losses were the most ever for an NCAA Championship team and the second most for the Bruins in a single season under Scates Scates was selected NCAA coach of the year 1984 1987 and 1993 7 His teams hold ten NCAA records including most consecutive victories 48 most consecutive home wins 83 and most consecutive tournament wins 14 He was inducted into the International Volleyball Hall of Fame in 1993 7 Retirement EditAfter coaching the Bruins for 50 seasons Scates retired at the end of the 2012 season He is the most successful coach in the history of the sport 8 He has been inducted into the Hall of Fame of a number of volleyball organizations including The American Volleyball Coaches Association The UCLA Athletics The California Beach Volleyball and the Volleyball Halls of Fame He was the first active coach inducted into the UCLA and Volleyball Halls of Fame 8 In retirement he offered It is a privilege to coach the fine men that have participated and continue to compete for UCLA volleyball I have enjoyed being a continuous member of UCLA volleyball since I walked onto the team as a junior in 1959 8 Said Penn State s Russ Rose I look at the 19 national championships and shake my head I can understand 50 years at UCLA because they don t have winter But the number of great players who have played at UCLA and the bond they all have for each other and the university is the greatest contribution he has made to the sport That s his lasting legacy 6 Personal life EditScates is married He and his wife have three children His son David is a Physical Education and Health and Guidance teacher at Herbert Hoover High School in Glendale CA He also has two daughters Leslie and Tracy and four grandchildren Three which from Leslie and one from David Scates is on the Board of Directors of the American Volleyball Coaches Association AVCA He was featured in the January 2007 issue of Coaching Volleyball Magazine the official magazine of the AVCA Scates was part of the Alpha Psi chapter of Phi Kappa Sigma International Fraternity while he matriculated at UCLA Awards and recognition EditIn 2003 Scates was enshrined in the UCLA Hall of Fame In 2004 Scates was enshrined in the American Volleyball Coaches Association AVCA Hall of Fame Scates has been named Coach of the Year five times 1984 1987 1993 1996 1998 Championships EditUCLA has won the following Volleyball Championships under Scates USVBA 2 1965 1967 NCAA 19 1970 1971 1972 1974 1975 1976 1979 1981 1982 1983 1984 1987 1989 1993 1995 1996 1998 2000 2006Head coaching record EditStatistics overview Season Team Overall Conference Standing PostseasonUCLA Mountain Pacific Sports Federation 1963 2010 1963 UCLA 26 3 2 USVBA 2nd Place1964 UCLA 23 4 1 USVBA 2nd Place1965 UCLA 24 2 1 USVBA Champions1966 UCLA 25 3 1 USVBA 2nd Place1967 UCLA 23 3 1 USVBA Champions1968 UCLA 24 5 2 USVBA 4th Place1969 UCLA 27 3 2 USVBA 2nd Place1970 UCLA 24 1 2 NCAA Champions1971 UCLA 29 1 2 NCAA Champions1972 UCLA 27 7 2 NCAA Champions1973 UCLA 21 8 4 Regional Runner Up1974 UCLA 30 5 3 NCAA Champions1975 UCLA 27 8 4 NCAA Champions1976 UCLA 15 2 1 NCAA Champions1977 UCLA 19 4 2 Regional Runner Up1978 UCLA 21 3 1 NCAA Runner Up1979 UCLA 30 0 1 NCAA Champions1980 UCLA 32 2 1 NCAA Runner Up1981 UCLA 32 3 2 NCAA Champions1982 UCLA 29 0 1 NCAA Champions1983 UCLA 27 4 1 NCAA Champions1984 UCLA 38 0 1 NCAA Champions1985 UCLA 32 8 3 Regional Runner Up1986 UCLA 30 9 2 Regional Runner Up1987 UCLA 38 3 1 NCAA Champions1988 UCLA 28 10 4 First round1989 UCLA 29 5 T 1 NCAA Champions1990 UCLA 23 5 2 Regional Runner Up1991 UCLA 16 9 1 Regional Runner Up1992 UCLA 17 7 2 Regional Runner Up1993 UCLA 24 3 1 NCAA Champions1994 UCLA 27 2 1 NCAA Runner Up1995 UCLA 31 1 1 NCAA Champions1996 UCLA 26 5 1 NCAA Champions1997 UCLA 24 5 1 NCAA Runner Up1998 UCLA 28 4 1 NCAA Champions1999 UCLA 20 7 3 First round2000 UCLA 29 5 1 NCAA Champions2001 UCLA 24 8 1 NCAA Runner Up2002 UCLA 25 7 T 5 First round2003 UCLA 15 14 92004 UCLA 24 6 3 Regional semifinals2005 UCLA 26 6 2 NCAA Runner Up2006 UCLA 26 12 7 NCAA Champions2007 UCLA 19 11 5 First round2008 UCLA 17 14 5 First round2009 UCLA 14 16 8 First round2010 UCLA 16 14 7 First round2011 UCLA 16 15 8 First round2012 UCLA 22 8 5 First roundUCLA 1239 290Total 1239 290 National champion Postseason invitational champion Conference regular season champion Conference regular season and conference tournament champion Division regular season champion Division regular season and conference tournament champion Conference tournament championReferences Edit a b UCLA Tribute Video Al Scates April 9 2012 Archived from the original on December 19 2021 Retrieved May 17 2017 a b c Boaz Calvin Al Scates Retirement College Volleyball s Story of the Year for 2012 Retrieved May 17 2017 a b c d e f g Reid Scott April 20 2012 UCLA s Al Scates a volleyball innovator The Orange County Register Retrieved May 17 2017 a b c d e f g Elliott Helene January 20 2012 End of this old boy s net work Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on January 22 2012 Retrieved May 17 2017 Arambawattage Rodrigo 1981 The History of Intercollegiate Volleyball in the United States from 1895 to the Present Day PDF Thesis The Ohio State University p 56 60 71 73 106 Archived from the original PDF on July 16 2011 Retrieved April 30 2010 a b Yoon Peter October 26 2012 The man who started it all NCAA com Archived from the original on May 8 2012 Retrieved May 17 2017 a b c d e Al Scates Biography International Volleyball Hall of Fame Retrieved May 18 2017 a b c Yoon Peter May 11 2011 UCLA s Al Scates to retire in 2012 ESPNLosAngeles com Retrieved May 17 2017 External links EditUCLA edu spotlight on Scates UCLA Coach Bio Scates page at the Volleyball Hall of Fame American Volleyball Coaches Association Instructional Volleyball Videos and Drills by Al Scates Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Al Scates amp oldid 1112206704, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.