University Southern California Trojans

Trojans Rematch With Cal In Berkeley
October 12, 2011 | Men's Water Polo
Oct. 12, 2011
THIS WEEK
The No. 4 USC men's water polo team tangles with its 2010 NCAA final foe for the first time this season when the Trojans (11-2, 2-0 MPSF) heads back to Berkeley to play No. 2 Cal. The three-time defending NCAA champs will take on the Bears at 2 p.m. on Saturday (Oct. 15) at Spieker Aquatics Complex, the site of last year's NCAA title match that the Trojans won with a 12-10 overtime victory.
RANKINGS
USC opened 2011 as the No. 1 team in the land -- deference to the Trojans' three straight NCAA titles and status as reigning MPSF Tournament champs -- and remained there for four weeks until taking their first losses on Oct. 2 and moving to No. 4. USC is ranked No. 4 this week, and California ranks No. 2.
SCOUTING CALIFORNIA
The No. 2 Golden Bears are 14-2 overall and 2-0 in MPSF play after three wins last week. Cal beat UCLA 8-5 and Long Beach State 14-6 in MPSF matches, and beat UC San Diego 18-8. Ivan Rackov leads the Bears and the conference in scoring with 49 goals. Goalie Justin Parsons is averaging 8.9 saves per game in 13 appearances. USC is 50-52-2 all-time against Cal, including last year's 12-10 overtime win over the Bears in the 2010 NCAA Championship game. USC went 2-1 against Cal last season, winning 12-11 in Berkeley, falling 12-9 at home, and then winning the national championship 12-10 in Berkeley.
LAST WEEK
USC got back to its winning ways last weekend in tacking up a 14-3 MPSF win over Long Beach State and a 13-3 nonconference win over LMU. The Trojans utilizied a balanced scoring attack and dominating defensive stands in both games. Nine different players scored vs. the 49ers, and 10 tallied goals vs. LMU. Kostas Genidounias was the high scorer against the Lions with a hat trick, while Peter Kurzeka climbed up to No. 16 on USC's all-time scorer list with two goal scored in each game. Joel Dennerley went the distance in the cage vs. Long Beach State, hauling in eight goals in that one. He shared time with Ely Bonilla against LMU, as Dennerley collected seven saves in three periods and Bonilla had three in the fourth frame to help lock down the Trojans' conference-leading defense.
SOCAL SLIP
The streaking USC men's water polo team stumbled on the second day of action at the SoCal Tournament in early October. The Trojans' undefeated start to 2011 and hopes of claiming a ninth straight SoCal title were both dashed by two losses in which USC uncharacteristically stalled out in the second half. The Trojans first fell 6-4 to No. 4 Stanford in Sunday morning's semifinals, and then got edged out by No. 2 UCLA in a 7-6 loss in the third-place game to leave the eight-time defending SoCal tourney champs with a fourth-place finish at the 2011 SoCal Tournament. The loss to Stanford snapped USC's 22-game win streak that had spanned from last season's run to the MPSF and NCAA Championships. The Trojans had a strong start to the tourney on opening day, picking up their eighth and ninth straight wins of the year with a 21-1 victory over Pomona-Pitzer and an 11-5 win over UC Irvine. Kostas Genidounias topped the scoring charts on the weekend with six goals, while Mace Rapsey put in five and Jeremy Davie, Nikola Vavic and Ivan Kustic had four each. Joel Dennerley made 26 saves in three games, and Ely Bonilla played five periods in the first two games with eight total saves.
SPREAD OFFENSE
In USC's first 13 games of 2011, 21 different Trojans have scored goals, including a set of eight with at least 10 goals to date. Peter Kurzeka leads the pack with 23, followed by newcomer Kostas Genidounias with 19. USC set its highwater mark with a season-high 12 different scorers in a 21-1 win over Pomona-Pitzer on Oct. 1. So far, USC is outscoring opponents 162-57 and holds the top defensive mark in the conference with an average of just 4.4 goals-against per game.
ANOTHER NOTCH IN NORCAL
USC made an early-season statement in capturing its second straight NorCal Tournament title behind a history-making defensive stand from USC goalie Joel Dennerley and a five-goal frenzy from newcomer Kostas Genidounias in a 10-8 championship win over UCLA. The Trojan had made short work of Stanford in the semifinals, stacking up its biggest win over Stanford since 2008 with a powerful 12-5 victory. Stockton also was the site of the Trojans' last big win over Stanford, which USC beat 10-3 in the 2008 tourney semis. USC's championship run was set up by two wins on Saturday in group play. The Trojans moved past West Valley JC with a 20-3 decision that they followed with an 11-4 win over UC Irvine. Ten Trojans scored in the victory over the Anteaters. Leading the scoring front in the last three games of the tourney was Genidounias with eight goals, followed by four each from Brian Boswell and Michael Rosenthal. Goalie Dennerley amassed 37 saves in those three games including a career day of 19 saves vs. the Bruins. For his historic and impressive saves tally in the winning run, Dennerley also collected his seventh career selection as the MPSF Player of the Week.
AUSTRALIAN TAKEOVER
Senior Joel Dennerley became USC's all-time career saves leader while also helping the Trojans claim their second straight NorCal Tournament championship. After 12 saves in a dominating 12-5 semifinal win over Stanford, Dennerley needed just three saves in the title match against UCLA in order to take over as USC's all-time career saves leader. The senior went well over that mark in collecting a career-high 19 saves for the Trojans' defensive stand against the rival Bruins, anchoring a 10-8 win to net the tournament title for USC while chiseling himself in Trojan history by eclipsing a 24-year stand by Kevin Stringer as the USC saves leader. Dennerley now holds 743 career saves. He's averaging 8.5 saves per game now, with 4.2 goals against.
IN THE BOOKS
USC seniors Joel Dennerley and Peter Kurzeka have inked their names on the USC career charts with impressive numbers as they touch in on their final seasons at Troy. Dennerley became USC's all-time career saves leader with a career-high 19-save outing vs. UCLA in the NorCal Championship game on Sept. 18. Kurzeka, meanwhile, is climbing up the career goals ladder. His 100th career goal was the winner in USC's 2010 NCAA Championship game, and he now holds 123 to have taken over at No. 16 all-time. If he stays on pace as USC crosses the halfway point of the season, Kurzeka can crack the all-time top-10, where Juan Delgadillo sits at No. 10 with 143 goals.
INTERNATIONAL PREVIEW
Trojans Jeremy Davie and Kostas Genidounias joined forces as teammates for the first time after having squared off as opponents at the FINA Men's Junior World Championships. A returning All-American for the Trojans, Davie capped up for his Australian Junior National Team, while newcomer Genidounias was a hometown hero for his Greek Junior National Team for the competition that came to a close on Sept. 4 in Volos, Greece. Both Trojans were key contributors for their respective squads overseas, as Australia and Greece wound up clashing in the third-place game. Davie struck first for Australia in the game, but it was Greece that would prevail in a 7-5 decision that secured a bronze medal for Genidounias and his Greek teammates. Both Trojans have wasted no time making an impact for USC. Genidounias is USC's second leading scorer with 19 goals, and Davie isn't far behind that count with 11.
SENIOR CORE AIMS FOR FOUR
Trojan seniors Matt Burton, Joel Dennerley and Peter Kurzeka were freshmen when USC won the 2009 NCAA championship. As sophomores, they again held the trophy high at the end of that season. Last year, as juniors, they led a USC squad picked to finish fourth in the conference to the top yet again. Now, with the stiff breeze of three straight national championships pushing them into their senior season at Troy, the All-American trio aims to go out on top once again and, in doing so, become the first collegiate men's water polo team ever to win four consecutive national championships.
YOUNG GUNS RETURN
Offensively, USC's top 10 scorers from 2010 are back in the water. That group accounted for 81 percent of USC's goal count last season. USC's top scorer as a freshman and an All-American as well, Nikola Vavic returns. More young power is generated from All-American Jeremy Davie, and fellow sophomores Mace Rapsey and Connor Virjee, who helped claim that third straight title in their first seasons of action with the Trojans, along with Tobias Preuss and Stephen Siri. More veteran talent comes in the form of Brian Boswell and Michael Rosenthal, members of USC's last two NCAA championship rosters. New guns are also in line to make a further impact as the Trojan depth charge expands for 2011.
2010 RECAP
The 2010 Trojans were picked fourth in both the 2010 MPSF and national preseason polls before thundering through the season with a 26-2 overall record to add the 2010 NCAA crown to its 2008 and 2009 trophies. USC dropped two losses during the regular season, but went on a roll to close out the year by winning the MPSF Tournament title and then finishing off a 12-10 overtime win over host Cal in the NCAA Championship game. It was USC's 25th NCAA appearance and sixth national championship, and gave the Trojans their fourth title in the past six seasons. Jovan Vavic was named the National Coach of the Year, making him the only men's water polo coach to earn three consecutive selections. Five Trojans were named All-Americans at year's end as well. MPSF Player of the Year Joel Dennerley and Peter Kurzeka earned First Team honors, with Matt Burton, Nikola Vavic and Jeremy Davie also named All-Americans. Vavic was the team's top scorer with 49 goals, leading a set of 21 scorers on the year. As a team, USC was the best in the MPSF, averaging 12.7 goals per game offensively and allowing 6.1 goals per game defensively. USC outscored its opponents 382-183 in 2010.


























