When Heather Mott took over Cienega High Schoolโs boys volleyball program in 2014, she hit the reset button.
Mott, who also coaches Cienegaโs girls volleyball team in the fall, eliminated the Bobcatsโ junior varsity team and reduced the program to one roster with 12 players.
She also began looking far and wide for players. Mott and former Bobcat Charlie de la Vera sought athletes from all sports across the CHS campus, whether they played football, basketball or track; they even took on wrestlers.
โAnybody that we saw could have potential in volleyball as an athlete, we came up to them and said, โHey, you come and believe in us, and weโre going to take athletes and then teach those athletes how to play volleyball,โโ Mott said. โThatโs kind of been our philosophy all along. Every single day, I walk on campus and look for athletes.
โThereโs so much of a football brotherhood that forms on the team. Because of that, the selfishness goes away and the โmeโ attitude goes away. These boys embraced each other and became family. For us, that has been the piece that has been so significant, and itโs carried forward.โ
Attracting multi-sport athletes has given Cienega a 163-54 record (.751) since Mott took over seven years ago, including a 58-2 record (.966) in the Class 5A Southern Region. Mottโs Bobcats havenโt lost a divisional match since 2018.
This yearโs team might be the best one yet. The second-seeded Bobcats (19-0) will host third-seeded Gilbert at Cienega in Thursdayโs Class 5A state semifinal match. Cienega and Salpointe Catholic are the only Tucson-area team remaining in the boys volleyball state playoffs; the Lancers will play at Phoenix Northwest Christian in Thursdayโs Class 4A state semifinals.
Winning a state championship has been Cienegaโs motivation since last March, when the COVID-19 pandemic shuttered the spring sports season after just nine matches. The Bobcats were 8-1 when the season was called off in mid-March; the teamโs seniors graduated without getting a chance to play for a title.
This yearโs team is doing its best to honor them. Those Bobcats have written the names of seniors who couldnโt compete last year on their shoes.
โWe had high hopes for last year,โ Mott said. โWe felt like we were about to make a deep run last year, and when we got cut short, it was devastating because we had a lot of the pieces in place. This group is kind of the remnants of that group. โฆ Theyโre carrying that legacy forward for those seniors.โ
The Bobcats certainly have the talent to win it all. Cienega star middle blocker Matthew Meeker-Hackett, the brother of Arizona Wildcats punter Jacob Meeker-Hackett, is second in Arizona with 100 blocks. The 6-foot-7-inch Grand Canyon University commit is โvery physical with the net,โ Mott says; he also leads the Bobcats in kills (164).
โHeโs somebody that gets better every single day heโs in the gym,โ Mott said. โAnd the cool thing about him is that heโs a great leader and one of our captains. He makes other kids better every time heโs in the gym. โฆ Heโs been huge in that respect. He just brings out the best in people.โ
Other seniors such as outside hitter Austin Keen and setter Aiden VanHoesen have been vital to Cienegaโs success, which has only dropped four sets the entire season. Since April 14, the Bobcats have claimed 36 sets while only losing one.
Of course, dominance can sometimes lead to complacency. Cienegaโs last lost set came in the regular season finale to Rincon/University, a team the Bobcats had swept at home earlier in the season.
โWe were having a hard time finding the court with anything we were doing in that first set,โ Mott said. โWe came in with a complacent arrogance and this โWeโre going to win no matter how we playโ attitude, and those experiences help us learn.โ
Mott instilled the โYouโve earned nothingโ mantra on her team to keep the Bobcats from entering auto-pilot mode. They havenโt lost a set in the postseason, and have shown flashes of the celebrated 2017 squad that delivered the programโs first-ever state championship.
If Cienega can beat Gilbert on Thursday and top either Queen Creek Casteel or Gilbert Williams Field on Saturday, the Bobcats will finish 2021 with a 21-0 record โ and end the year with a perfect tribute to last yearโs club.
โThereโs a very special feel with this group of boys. Theyโre similar to that 2017 group where there are so many other things theyโre playing for other than themselves,โ Mott said. โThereโs a special feel, so weโll see how far that special feel can take us. โฆ These boys have put in the time and deserve to have the success theyโre having even if itโs over at this point. They deserve all of that.
โThatโs how we felt about the 2017 team. They worked so hard and overcame so much and thatโs how we feel about this group, too.โ