Top of his game
Mike Sciacca
Like many Laguna Beach youngsters, Dain Blanton got a taste of beach
volleyball at a very young age.
He remembers going down to the beach with his brothers and friends for
an overnight camp out, which, at the time, was the only sure way one
could reserve a seat for the very popular Jose Cuervo Beach Volleyball
Championship, held every June in Laguna Beach.
“The place was packed in those days,” recalled Blanton of those
tournament days in the early 1980s. “Seeing the games and the big crowds
really got me fired up.”
Those days had a great bearing on the Laguna Beach native, who, as
locals know, by now, went on to have a stellar volleyball career.
That career continues to flourish to this day.
The 30-year-old is in the midst of preparations for the Huntington
Beach Open, which opens today with qualifying competition at the south
side of the Huntington Beach Pier.The tournament is the first of seven
stops on the 2002 Assn. of Volleyball Professionals tour that will also
touch down in such places as Hermosa Beach, Santa Barbara, Belmar, N.J.,
Manhattan Beach, Chicago and Las Vegas.
Forty-eight of the world’s best volleyball athletes will be fighting
for a share of more than $1 million in AVP tour prize money.
Blanton and his on-court partner, Carl Henkel, a 1996 Olympian, are
not required to play a qualifying match. Their first match will take
place on Saturday.
The tournament, which features both men’s and women’s competition,
concludes Sunday with championship round play.
“I haven’t had the opportunity to play in Huntington Beach for a few
years and it’s rare that I get the chance to play in Orange County,” he
said. ‘
The 6-foot-3, 205 Blanton, a 1990 graduate of Laguna Beach High, was
MVP of the Pacific Coast League as a senior and was a two-sport All-CIF
athlete in volleyball and basketball. He was also all-state in basketball
in 1990, when Laguna Beach played for a CIF championship at the Los
Angeles Sports Area.
After turning down several college basketball scholarships, he
followed his heart and concentrated on volleyball. He received a full
scholarship to play at Pepperdine University where he helped lead the
Waves to the 1992 NCAA title. He has played professionally ever since
graduating with a degree in public relations from the Malibu campus in
1994.
In 1997 Blanton became a pioneer in the sport of beach volleyball by
becoming the first African American professional player in the history of
the sport to win a major title.
But he says he reached the pinnacle of his career at the 2000 Summer
Olympics in Sydney, Australia.
Along with teammate, Eric Fonoimoana, the duo won the gold medal by
upsetting the world’s top seeded team from Brazil in front of an
enthusiastic crowd in excess of 10,000.
“In that moment I reached the peak of the sport,” Blanton said. “It
was such an amazing experience in Sydney to begin with, but winning the
gold medal made it an out-of-this-world experience.”
He says that while he continues to train and play in tournaments
worldwide, his ultimate goal is to play for the U.S. in men’s beach
volleyball at the 2004 Olympic Games in Athens, Greece.
Blanton, who has earned his teaching credential, will start fighting
for a spot on the U.S. team when qualifying play begins in January of
2003.
But for now, his sights this weekend are set on the Huntington Beach
Open. Blanton, a winner of six event titles who has earned more than
$500,000 in his pro beach volleyball career, and the 6-7 Henkel, are
seeded 14th in the men’s tournament.
“I plan on having a great time in Huntington,” added Blanton, who, in
1997, established “Dain’s Day at the Beach,” a sponsor driven series of
volleyball clinics that expose kids throughout Los Angeles’ urban areas
to the sport. “Of course, though, we’ll be there to win.”
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