Shardonee Hayes, Liz Shelton, Paige Whipple, Erin Williamson and Kendra Dahlke.
Five players on the Arizona womens volleyball team, five concussions over the last five weeks.
Its so random that weve had so many in a short period of time, said UA coach Dave Rubio, whose Wildcats host Colorado on Friday night at McKale Center. I feel like I should go buy a lottery ticket isnt it the Mega Powerball up to like almost 2 million dollars? Maybe the numbers I pick are everyones number on their uniform thats gotten nailed.
Volleyball typically isnt the sport people associate with concussions. But they do happen, and the 25th-ranked Wildcats arent alone. Both Mercer (2015) and North Carolina (2017) lost four players to concussions.
Complicating matters is the nature of concussions. Symptoms affect every athlete differently, and everybody seems to recover at their own pace.
People are also reading…
Hayes was the first Wildcat to suffer a concussion this season. She was hit in the head on the same spot five times. Her symptoms included dizziness, headaches, nausea, and aversion to light.
Shelton was injured in practice the week of the Wildcats Pac-12 opener against Arizona State. She returned to practice Oct. 9, but has not been cleared to play.
Were just lucky, but not in the best way, said Shelton. I know concussions arent necessarily that common in volleyball, but for us were just being found by the right balls at the wrong time.
Symptoms I suffered from were difficulty concentrating, headaches, nausea, feeling very tired, and just feeling really slow and like I was in a mental fog.
Next was Whipple. She was hit in the head twice; once during serve-and-pass drills, the second time off a block. Both occurred during a match at Oregon State, which was supposed to be a special time. Whipple grew up in nearby Salem.
Whipple said she didnt feel anything until the night we got home; I had a headache.
Then I woke up the next morning, I felt, honestly, like a bobblehead. I had never felt that before, because I never had a concussion. So I thought, Ah, something might be going on, she said. Mostly dizziness, headache and my eyes I had a really hard time with light, inside and outside.
Whipple missed the following weekends home losses to Washington and Washington State, but was back for last weeks matches in Los Angeles.
Williamson was the only Wildcat to suffer a concussion off the court. She hit her chin while lifting weights.
Dahlke suffered her concussion seven points into last Fridays match against UCLA. She was kneed in the head while diving for the ball.
The Bruins swept the Wildcats, who lost the three sets by a total of seven points.
Arizona is 14-6 overall and 3-5 in Pac-12 play, having lost its last four conference matches.
Obviously its frustrating, Rubio said. I told the team that we have enough talent to beat teams and to win. Though I think subconsciously sometimes when you are down two starters (Shelton and Dahlke), when things start to get a little hard, they let go of the rope.
I saw that in the USC in Game 4 (on Sunday). I hadnt seen that before, but I think its, Hey were supposed to lose, we dont have everybody. So its OK to lose. We have an excuse. I dont think they really say that to themselves, but subconsciously we feel sorry for ourselves. And obviously we cant do that.
Still, Rubio is hoping for a strong finish. The Wildcats arent even at the halfway point of conference play, which means theres time to get better both on the court and in the trainers room.
For me, just from believing in the process and being faithful to the process eventually well get healthy in the second half of the season is when we are really going to be good, Rubio said. When we get everybody back, and our system starts to really click. And now we are better because the players who normally wouldnt play have had to play and now we have more experience and more depth.

