Date: Fri 08-Nov-1996
Date: Fri 08-Nov-1996
Publication: Bee
Author: KIMH
Quick Words:
Kristin-Denninger-Feature
Full Text:
Kristin Denninger Feature
B Y K IM J. H ARMON
Looking back it seems like nothing more than one 3-0 win in a string of 3-0
wins, but this one particular 3-0 win over Jonathan Law on a Saturday morning
in October was not only a defining moment in the season for the Newtown High
School volleyball team, it was a defining moment in the career of Kristin
Denninger.
The first two years of her career had been non-descript, played in the shadows
of girls like Lysha Lockwood and Alison Stephenson, and last year she was a
somewhat inconsistent middle hitter on a team that struggled to be simply
mediocre.
This year, though, as a senior co-captain, Kristin, now 17, expected to be
good.
It just took a little while.
"I remember the Jonathan Law game well," said Kristin. "Just in warmups, all
of a sudden everything started to click. Up to that point, I had been really
early because my timing wasn't right for the outside hitting. I was still
leaving when I should have for a middle hit. I don't know why, but it all just
clicked."
That feeling, that state of being, is something she expected of herself - and
the team, to be sure - in 1995.
"Last year was the first year where I only played middle and that took a lot
of getting used to," said Kristin, "because I had been used to playing all
across the front row. I wasn't consistent, I don't think, but I always find
things wrong with what I'm doing."
The Lady Nighthawks - then called the Lady Indians - struggled through a
season that had more peaks and valleys than the roller coasters at Great
Adventure. It was a confusing season where surprising victories followed
impossible losses and in it all Kristin never quite clicked.
"I just hoped that I would get better this year," said Kristin, "and all the
work in the winter and summer really helped."
In the winter she played Junior Olympic volleyball, like many of her
teammates, and in the summer she played in the Nutmeg Games and in the middle
of all of that she worked every day with her J.O. coach on running, lifting
and jump training.
It would have seemed like Kristin would be poised on the bring of a break out
season, where she carried the team like she no doubt expected to as a junior,
but then the winds of fate threw some good fortune towards the Lady Nighthawks
and Kristin Denninger.
On those winds of fate came Dee Conley, a midwestern transfer who was named
All-Conference Honorable Mention as a sophomore in Ohio, and Dee - like
Kristin - was a middle hitter.
All of a sudden it was a clogged position, counting the presence of sophomore
Jenn Corkum, and before new coach Nell-Ayn Lynch could decide who to move to
the outside, Kristin sort of volunteered.
And on the outside, she thrived.
"I liked the middle," she said, "because I love to block and when you play
outside you don't get to block as much, but I like hitting on the outside
better."
Her presence on the outside gave setter Leigh Hoppmeyer three options on
almost every pass up from the back row and, with Conley in the middle, it gave
opposing teams two places to defend and almost no chance.
And that was one of the many reasons why the Lady Nighthawks had that 10-match
win streak early in the season and why they are presently sitting on a 20-3
record heading into a CIAC Class L second round match with Southington.
Things have been going very well for the team, and for Kristin, who has a
strong will and an even stronger drive to be as good a player as she possibly
can.
"I want to force myself to play hard," said Kristin. "I want to be sore when
I'm done. I want everyone else to play like that and I want everyone to have
the same drive that I have. And a lot of times, we all do."
And no matter the accolades that others may place on her after a game well
played, the senior holds herself under a harsher light than most and sometimes
she finds feelings of satisfaction a little bit illusive.
"Sometimes I'm very happy," Kristin admitted. "I can find specific moments
where everything is working - like the hitting and the digging and I'm all
over the floor - but I hold myself to a higher standard than everyone else. I
judge myself more than anyone else. People will come up to me and say, `boy,
great game,' and I would think, no it wasn't."
But even she can admit that a 20-3 record and the runner-up status Newtown
earned in the South-West Conference, was as close to The Dream as the Lady
Nighthawks had hoped to be.
It anything but like that in 1995.
"I would get really frustrated last year," said Kristin. "A lot of times I
went home angry with myself because I always thought if I had done something
better than it maybe it would have come out different."
But with new personnel and a new coach, attitudes - and outlooks - changed.
"Early on," said Kristin, "Nell was trying to tell us that we had to learn
that we are better and that we don't know how to lose. It took a couple games
to get it into our heads that, wow, we really could do this."
But in sports and academics, Kristin, a new inductee into the National Honor
Society, knows that good is sometimes not good enough. That is an attitude
that she will take with her to college . . . and beyond.
"I never think that anything is quite good enough," she said. "I know that I
can always be better. I'm never going to be perfect."
