 |
SISTER ACT: Junior Ogonna Nnamani
is one of the most dominant players in the college
game. Freshman Njideka Nnamani is a versatile addition
who can play outside hitter or setter.
Rod Searcey
|
AT HOME, they often “pepper” in
the basement, when Mom and Dad aren’t around.
“Someone will serve, someone will pass, or we can
set,” says
big sis Ogonna Nnamani, one of Stanford’s star outside
hitters. “It’s not a very destructive game, in
a lamp-friendly way.”
Younger sister Njideka giggles
at that. She reminds her lifelong roommate of the times
when their mother has
come home unexpectedly and yelled, “What’s
going on downstairs?”
Ah, the perils of trying to
contain two energetic volleyball players under one
roof. Ogonna, ’05, and Njideka, ’07,
grew up playing on club teams in Bloomington, Ill.,
and took their high school team to two state championships.
The Cardinal
got its first real glimpse of the sister act on the
afternoon of August 30, when Njideka recorded her first
collegiate kill
and Ogonna notched a match-high 15 kills as Stanford
swept the Bradley Braves 3-0 in Fort Collins, Colo.
That night, against
Florida A&M, Ogonna tallied a career-high 30 kills.
The
Nnamanis are wicked tough on the court—“extraordinarily
athletic,” as coach John Dunning puts it—but
friendly as can be in their downtime. At home, they
share hip-hop CDs
and choreograph dances, sometimes dragging younger
brothers Nnaemeka, 15, and Ikechi, 12, into the floor
show. On campus,
Ogonna weaves cornrows for other players, and Njideka
is the team’s fashion consultant. (“I really
like your earrings,” she whispers to a reporter who’s
unaccustomed to hearing compliments from student-athletes.)
 |
 |
At
home, they share hip-hop CDs and choreograph dances,
into
the floor
show.
|
With
the June graduation of Olympian and two-time Player
of the Year Logan Tom, Ogonna may be stepping into
a new leadership role. “What we asked her to do last
year was to be a terminating attacker and blocker,” says
Dunning, who is starting his third season as head coach. “This
year we’re asking her to [play] a larger role—to
also play defense in the back row and to attack from
the back row,
which will make her presence felt in the game more.” Ogonna,
he adds, “is one of the people in the college game
right now who can carry all of that.”
Ogonna, who
was Pac-10 Freshman of the Year in 2001, was one of
three collegians who played for the United
States in
this summer’s Pan American Games, and Dunning says
the experience shows. “She is calmer, has more confidence
and wants the ball even more than she always has. She
has played the Cubans and Puerto Ricans and Brazilians,
which are some
of the best teams in the world.”
Njideka is one of
five freshmen on the team, and Dunning describes her
as a valuable utility player. “She can
do three things—play libero, play outside hitter
and set,” he says. “We’re going to have
to figure out what to do with her long-term, but right
now we’re
trying to have her be an outside hitter because then
she can pass and dig and hit and block—do everything
except set.”
Dunning says players are motivated to
prove themselves this season. “One, we lost [the
NCAA championship], and two, Logan’s gone and people
want to believe we aren’t
any good now. So our job is to say, ‘Okay, we know
what you’re thinking and we want to prove to you
that we deserve your respect.’ ” So far,
so good. With four returning starters, including All-American
middle blocker Sara McGee, ’04, the fourth-ranked
Cardinal was off to a 12-2 start at press time. Freshman
Kristin Richards, the top high school recruit in the nation
last year,
was second on the team in kills and digs. And rumor
had it that a certain big sister would really like to show
her little
sister the Final Four.
RETURN
TO TOP
|