Sept. 19, 2006
COLUMBIA, S.C. — One day after being named SEC Offensive Player of the Week, senior outside hitter Shonda Cole from the South Carolina volleyball team was named American Volleyball Coaches Association National Player of the Week. Cole is the first Gamecock in school history to receive the honor.
Cole helped lead USC (9-4, 2-0 SEC) to a 2-0 record last week with a 3-2 victory against Auburn and a 3-1 stunner over No. 6 Florida. The Kings Mountain, N.C., native blasted 36 kills versus Auburn and had 35 in the win over the Gators. She posted double-doubles in both contests by adding a career-high 18 digs against Auburn and had 17 against Florida. Between the two matches, Cole ripped 71 kills, hit .382 (71-19-136) and averaged 7.89 kills and 3.89 digs per game.
Cole moved into sole possession of second place on USC’s career list for kills after getting 36 against Auburn. She has 1,382 for her career. Her 35 kills versus Florida was a school record in a four-game match, surpassing the old standard of 28.
For the year, Cole has notched five 30-kill matches, which leads the nation. In the history of South Carolina volleyball, only six 30-kill matches have occurred. Cole also leads the country in kills per game with a lofty 6.2 average.
With Cole leading the way against No. 6 Florida, South Carolina managed to end a 25-match losing streak to the Gators and post just its second win against Florida since joining the SEC in 1991. USC’s previous win over Florida came Nov. 13, 1994, when the Gators were ranked 11th. Florida also is the highest-ranked team USC has defeated since the AVCA first conducted its poll in 1982.