Sunset during the TKN match/FIVB photo

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Kristen Nuss and Taryn Kloth swept their opener; Miles Partain and Andy Benesh got swept in the first Olympics beach volleyball match under the Eiffel Tower.

Kristen Nuss, Taryn Kloth win debut Olympic match over Canada

Despite what the score may suggest, Kristen Nuss is adamant that what the 12,000 attendees in Eiffel Tower Stadium and the millions more watching at home saw on Sunday was not great beach volleyball.

The scores of her and Taryn Kloth’s opening win over Canada’s Sophie Bukovec and Heather Bansley looked clean enough, a 21-17, 21-14 victory that was the second-most lopsided win of Saturday’s slate. That, Nuss might argue, is misleading.

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Taryn Kloth, left, and Kristen Nuss celebrate a point/FIVB photo

But the same could have been said for their most recent win at the Gstaad Elite16. Winning at the highest level in the world is no easy feat. Sometimes you have to win ugly. That, in a sense, is what they did in Switzerland four weeks ago. They required comebacks big and small, including an 8-3 mountain to climb in the third set of the finals – a mountain they climbed just fine, to the tune of a 12-4 run to close it. That, in a sense, is also what makes Nuss and Kloth elite enough to be the No. 2 seed in their debut Olympic Games.

“I would certainly say we are perfectionists and nothing is every going to be good enough,” Kloth said. “There are always more things to work on. But yes, it was nearly, exactly what we wanted.”

When their best isn’t available, they’re still good enough to win golden cowbells and dominate an exceptional Canadian team by 11 in their first match of Paris.

In a roundabout way, then, Saturday was perhaps a showcase of the best side of Nuss and Kloth: This is them on a bad day.

Their bad days are just better than almost every other team on the planet on their best day.

Good as they are, however, they are locked in the most difficult pool of these Olympic Games, and will meet reigning Olympic silver medalists Mariafe Artacho and Taliqua Clancy on July 29. Pool will conclude with China’s Chen Xue and Xinyi Xia, who fell to Australia 20-22, 21-14, 14-16 earlier on Saturday.

Paris Olympic Games
The atmosphere for Kristen Nuss and Taryn Kloth in Paris/FIVB photo

7 blocks for Jorge Alayo in Cuba’s upset over USA’s Miles Partain, Andy Benesh

The demise of Andy Benesh and Miles Partain in their first match of the Paris Olympic Games can be summed up in two words: Jorge Alayo.

The 23-year-old Cuban blocker, making his Olympic debut alongside 21-year-old defender Noslen Diaz, finished the 21-18, 21-18 upset with seven blocks — five more than Benesh and three more than what is considered the world-class standard in a two-set match.

“Alayo is a great player,” Benesh said. “Everyone here is a great player. They’re a physical team and I thought they played well today. He blocked really well.”

Indeed, if not for Alayo’s block coming alive midway through the opening set in a stadium set up by the Eiffel Tower, USA Volleyball fans could very well be celebrating a vastly different result. Up 16-11 in the first, Benesh and Partain, who were 2-0 against Cuba leading up to Paris, had taken control of the match with a 4-1 run that saw Cuba hit three balls out and Benesh collect one of his two blocks.

Then came Alayo.

Back-to-back blocks preceded an ace, a Partain error, a transition swing from Diaz, another error, and another transition putaway from Diaz.

In a blink, a once-commanding lead was now flipped into a 16-19 deficit.

The Americans would only lead for a single point during the remainder of the match. When they drew close in the second, whittling a three-point deficit to just one at 14-15, it was, again, Alayo who snuffed the momentum. An Alayo side-out led to a block and another transition kill for Diaz, stretching the lead back to four. Benesh and Partain wouldn’t draw closer than two again.

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Miles Partain, left, and Andy Benesh after their match.

“Their serving was really good,” Benesh said. “I think that was the main difference-maker. They were able to get us out of system and it’s difficult to side out against this level of team when you’re out of system.”

Benesh and Partain will have two full days of rest before their next match, against Morocco’s Mohamed Abicha and Zouheir Elgraoui on Tuesday. It is a friendly draw, one that almost assures Benesh and Partain will break pool, which makes the loss to Cuba disappointing, yes, but far from defeating.

“It’s a mix of being really happy to be here and disappointed about the first game,” Partain said. “We’ve played many tournaments with the same format so we’re going to move onto the next match and we’re looking forward to that.”

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Jorge Alayo not only beats his block, but knocks Andy Benesh’s hat off his head/FIVB photo

Sweden’s David Ahman, Jonatan Hellvig deliver against Australia

Sweden’s David Ahman and Jonatan Hellvig, the heavy favorites to win gold in Paris, looked the part on Saturday afternoon, delivering a smooth, 21-14, 21-19 win over Australia’s Mark Nicolaidis and Izac Carracher. It is Sweden’s eighteenth straight win and second straight sweep over the Australians in their only two meetings.

Other Olympic beach volleyball results from Saturday

George-Andre (Brazil) defeated Abicha-Elgraoui (Morocco) 21-18, 21-10
Cherif-Ahmed (Qatar) defeated Cottafava/Nicolai (Italy) 21-19, 21-18

Sunday’s schedule

Another USA team makes its debut, Tokyo Olympian Kelly Cheng and former USC partner Sara Hughes, who is in her first Games. They play Barbora Hermannovaand Marie-Sara Stochlova of Czechia at 10 p.m. local time.

Also in action are the defending gold-medalists, Christian Sorum and Anders Mol of Norway, who won in 2021 in Tokyo:

9 a.m. — Gottardi-Menegatti (Italy) vs. Liliana-Paula (Spain)
10 a.m. — van de Velde-Immers (Netherlands) vs. Ranghieri-Carambula (Italy)
11 a.m. — Carol-Barbara (Brazil) vs. Akikho-Ishii (Japan)
Noon — Muller-Tillmann (Germany) vs. Vieira-Chamerau (France)
3 p.m. — Stam-Schoon (Netherlands) vs. Paulikiene-Raupelyte (Lithuania)
4 p.m. — Ana Patricia-Duda (Brazil) vs. Marwa-Elghobashy (Egypt)
5 p.m. –Perusic-Schweiner (Czech Republic) vs. Schacter-Dearing (Canada)
8 p.m. — Evandro-Arthur (Brazil) vs. Horl-Horst (Austria)
9 p.m. — Mol-Sorum (Norway) vs. M. Grimalt-E. Grimalt (Chile)
10 p.m. — Cheng-Hughes (USA) vs. Hermannova-Stochlova (Czechia)

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