Daly Santana

Daly Santana
Personal information
Full name Daly Santana Morales
Nationality Puerto Rican
Born (1995-02-19) February 19, 1995
Corozal, Puerto Rico
Height 6 ft 1 in (1.85 m)
Weight 65 kg (143 lb)
Spike 300 cm (118 in)
Block 274 cm (108 in)
College(s) Minnesota
Volleyball information
Position Outside hitter
Current club ASPTT Mulhouse
Number 8
Career
YearsTeams
2010–2011Llaneras de Toa Baja
2015–2016Capitalinas de San Juan
2016–ASPTT Mulhouse
National team
2014– Puerto Rico

Daly Santana Morales (born February 19, 1995) is a Puerto Rican indoor volleyball player. She is a 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) outside hitter. She is part of the Puerto Rico women's national volleyball team since 2014.[1] At the age of 21 she competed at the 2016 Summer Olympics

Early life

Santana has said that volleyball stopped being just a game for her at the age of 11, when she made Puerto Rico's Youth National Team.[2] In 2010, she led the team to the bronze medal at the NORCECA Girls’ Youth Volleyball Tournament.[3] In 2011, she captained the team at the 2011 FIVB Volleyball Girls' Youth World Championship in Turkey.[3]

In 2011, as a 16-year old, Santana split time between homework, the Bayamon Military Academy high school volleyball team, and the Llaneras de Toa Baja, a professional team in the LVSF.[4] In 2011, she made her debut with Puerto Rico's senior team when it played at the 2011 Pan American Games in Guadalajara, Mexico.[2]

College career

In 2012, Santana began playing NCAA Division I volleyball, joining the Minnesota Gophers of the Big Ten as a freshman. Despite major lifestyle adjustments, the language barrier,[5] and making her college debut in one of the toughest conferences in the nation, Santana's freshman season was a successful one, her performance earning her a unanimous selection to the Freshman All-Big Ten team. Her 56 service aces that year led the Gophers,[6] ranked 3rd in the Big Ten,[7] and 5th nationally.[8] The Gophers reached the Regional Finals of the 2012 NCAA Division I Women's Volleyball Tournament, and Santana was named to the NCAA All-Tournament Team.[3] In 2014, Santana was an AVCA All-America honorable mention. That year, she was joined at Minnesota by a former teammate in the Puerto Rico Youth National Team, libero Dalianliz Rosado. The path shared by the two to arrive on campus and their common heritage were both catalysts in making the pair bond productively and help each other stay focused,[9][10] specially after a disappointing 2014 that saw the team miss the NCAA tournament for the first time since 1998 and finish the year with a losing record in one of the most competitive conferences in the nation. In 2015, it all came together for Santana and the Gophers. After a shaky 1-2 start, the Gophers won their second Big Ten Conference championship[11] in program history and headed back to the NCAA Tournament with a 26-4 record and the top seed in their region, earning coach Hugh McCutcheon both the 2015 Big Ten Coach of the Year award[12] and the AVCA Coach of the Year award at the national level.[13][14] They reached the NCAA Final Four for the fourth time in program history, where they lost to the Texas Longhorns. Santana truly established herself as one of the premier players in NCAA Division I volleyball, earning the 2015 Big Ten Player of the Year award after leading the conference with 4.53 kills per set.[12][15] She led the Gophers in kills (584), points (654.5), and service aces (39), was second in digs (375), and was twice named Big Ten Player of the Week.[3] She was a unanimous All-Big Ten selection.[16] Her 39 kills in a 5-set match against Louisville on September 4, 2015 were the most by any NCAA Division I player that year.[17] Along with fellow teammate Hannah Tapp, Santana earned 2015 AVCA First-Team All-America honors.[18] When she reached the end of her college career, Santana's 1644 points, 182 service aces, and 1280 digs respectively ranked 7th, 8th, and 10th in program history.[19] She graduated in May 2016 with a major in youth studies.[15] She has said she is interested in pursuing a career in criminal justice.[20]

Career

In 2016, Santana reentered Puerto Rico's Liga de Voleibol Superior Femenino (LVSF) after a 5-year hiatus.[21] Her LVSF team, the San Juan Capitalinas, itself was making a comeback to the league after a decade-long absence.[22] The return was triumphant for both player and team. The Capitalinas reached their first LVSF Finals since 1992,[22] and Santana emerged as one of the leading lights of the LVSF, earning both the Most Improved Player[23] and Most Valuable Player[24] awards as well as receiving the most votes to the All-LVSF team.[25]

Awards

College

Individuals

References

  1. "Team Roster – Puerto Rico". FIVB.org. Retrieved 11 February 2016.
  2. 1 2 "Three months at the U make freshman a star"
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Daly Santana Minnesota Gophers Bio"
  4. "Entre el voleibol y los estudios"
  5. "GOPHER SPOTLIGHT: DALY SANTANA"
  6. "STATISTICAL LEADERS"
  7. "2012 Big Ten Volleyball Overall Statistics"
  8. "NCAA Statistics Individual Rankings 2012-13"
  9. "HERMANAS POR SIEMPRE"
  10. "Minnesota In-Focus: "Daly Santana and Dalianliz Rosado""
  11. "GOPHER VOLLEYBALL WINS BIG TEN TITLE"
  12. 1 2 "Big Ten Announces 2015 Postseason Volleyball Honors"
  13. "MCCUTCHEON NAMED NATIONAL COACH OF THE YEAR"
  14. "Hugh McCutcheon Wins AVCA Coach of the Year"
  15. 1 2 "SENIOR SPOTLIGHT: DALY SANTANA"
  16. "THREE WITH GOPHER TIES SET FOR COMPETITION".
  17. "NCAA player career search"
  18. "DI Women's Volleyball: AVCA releases 2015 All-America teams".
  19. "CAREER RECORDS".
  20. "GOPHER SPOTLIGHT: DALY SANTANA".
  21. "CAGUAS REGRESA AL TOPE DE LA LVSF".
  22. 1 2 "Las Capitalinas logran su pase a la final".
  23. "DALY SANTANA, LA DE MAS PROGRESO EN LA LVSF".
  24. "DALY SANTANA ES LA MAS VALIOSA DE LA LVSF 2016".
  25. "DALY SANTANA ES LA MAS VOTADA EN EL EQUIPO IDEAL LVSF 2016".

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/1/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.