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Welcome to the Manhattan Open
AVP!

The view from the
Strand bring it on!
Home is where the heart is beach volleyball's birthplace explodes
with the AVP.
Manhattan
Beach Bars and Restaurants
Surfest
Photos & Video
Culture, tradition
and socializing come together like waves to the sand at the annual Manhattan
Beach Open AVP pro beach volleyball tournament. Talk about a beach party!
AVP
stands for the Association of Volleyball Professionals, but this tournament
has been around long before there was such an organization. It is such
a part of this Southern California surfside city that people turn out
by the thousands, sitting on towels, in beach chairs or just on the
sand cheering on the pros of the game they play on these same courts
the rest of the year. In fact, the sport was born on this very beach.

The sacred sand of Manhattan, THE place the pros want to win.

Beijing Olympic Gold Medalists Todd Dalhausser and Todd Rogers.
The 2008 Croc's AVP Manhattma Open was held Sept. 19-21, more than a month later than its usual mid-August date because of the Summer Olympics. And it was the Olympians who earned a plaque on the Pier, the Gold Medal teams of Todd Rogers and Phil Dalhausser taking the men's title and Kerri Walsh and Misty May-Treanor the women's. Rogers and Dallhausser defeated Nick Lucena and Sean Scott 21-16, 21-16 on Sunday. Walsh and May-Treaor disposed of Jennifer Boss and April Ross 21-18 and 21-16 on Saturday. Each has now won this coveted title three consecutive years.

In the stands, the fans enjoy the setting of the Manhattan Open.
For this event, the outer courts and much of the grandstands were free. The only tickets being were are for courtside seats. While some feel the beach and the tournament should always be free – after all, the sport was invented right here in Manhattan Beach – others like the fact they can roll up at any time and have a great seat for the weekend.

In the beachside bars, the fans enjoy the setting of the Manhattan Open.
Anyone who can get down on Friday is rewarded with the ability to walk right up to a court and watch the pros only a few feet away from the action. This is one of the great pleasures of this sport.

Eight-time winner
Karch Kiraly celebrates hi s '04 title with fans in the bar.
The Manhattan Open is to Manhattan Beach what the Masters is to Augusta,
the Rose Bowl is to Pasadena, Wimbledon is to England. It's the sport's
premier event, beach volleyball's Super Bowl, its Daytona 500. To win
the Manhattan Open defines one as a true player you haven't
arrived in this sport until you've won Manhattan.
In the beginning years of the Manhattan Open, the victors won dinner
and a pitcher of beer at a local restaurant. Most importantly, however,
they became "Kings of the Beach" for a year. Modern-day winners
get a few more dollars but definitely covet being the "Kings"
and now "Queens" more than a paycheck. It has become so popular
that the AVP needs to add a few more rows of seats to accommodate the
fans. Added entertainment, such as testing the speed of one's volleyball,
serve and slot-car racing give the event an NFL Experience type of atmosphere.
Except, of course, it's on the beach. And it's Manhattan.


On the sand and
in the stands, the action is hot at the Manhattan Open.
"This is the biggest tournament we've got," said Kevin Wong,
who teamed with Stein Metzger to win in 2001. "It is so special
to win here. This is so wonderful!" In 2004, Karch Kiraly spoke
for everyone who has ever played this tournament when he said, "You
talk to any player and if they were told they could only win one tournament
in their whole career, everybody would choose it to be here in Manhattan.
There's an extra fire among all the players."
In 2005, Jake Gibb teamed with Metzger to win and couldn't contain
his emotions afterward. "This event is so special," Gibb said.
"it means to much to the sport. I can't believve it can't
fathom it. This is a sweet one." He added, "Other tournaments,
I go in thinking about the volleyball. I came into this one thinking,
this is Manhattan!"
AVP Manhattan
Open Photos
Click Here for 2008 AVP Manattan Photos, Pictures of the Bars & Party Scene and past tournaments



The PubClubettes
prepare to party at the Shellback Tavern. Watch out!
They know as do all others who came before them and who will
come after them Manhattan is THE beach volleyball victory.
After
matches and in particularly victory in Manhattan the players
mingle with the fans. In the bas.
More specifically, meet them in Shellback Tavern, the legendary
beachside bar.
This, more than anything else, defines this tournament. It's tradition
for the winners to go to the bars and party with the fans. The people
are probably the most knowledgeable sports fans anywhere and the players
like hanging with such cool folks. Imagine Vladimir Guerrero doing this after
an Angeles game. Or Kobe after a Lakers game.
It certainly fits right in with the area. In this part of the world,
cocktails and volleyball go together like the beach and bikinis. People
park it on the sand and fish cold ones out of coolers while sitting
only feet away from star players like Rogers and Dalhausser or Walsh and May-Treanor. In between
matches, it's off to one of the two beachside bars. Then it's
back to the beach, then back to the bar, the beach again, then the bar
for good.
Shellback's is the top place to celebrate on Sunday after the tournament. On Saturday it's packed, as well, but because it's bigger, there's even more of a crowd at the other bar off the beach, Beaches. It has two levels and much of the action and entertainment (that is to say, the locals partying) is in the main bar downstairs.
Manhattan is such a cherished event that legendary star Sinjin Smith
picked Manhattan to retire after some 25 years of action. Sinjin is
a true local hero, and not just because he won Manhattan five times
(more than 250 events in all). He and onetime partner Randy Stoklos
were the undisputed Kings of every beach, winning an incredible 113
of 225 tournaments. "Smith and Stoklos" were as synonymous
with the beach as Montana and Rice were with football.
But
it was off the sand where Sinjin made his biggest mark on the sport.
Eager to earn more than dinner and beer for winning tournaments, he
hired his own PR guy, began to get media attention, and, eventually,
sponsors. At first, this alienated the game's traditionalists, who felt
volleyball should stay true to its low-key roots. They felt otherwise
when, by the early 90s, prize money was in the hundreds of thousands
and beach volleyball became an Olympic sport. Sinjin was to beach volleyball
what Babe Ruth was to baseball, what Arnold Palmer was to golf.
A few years ago he retired and it was only appropriate that Manhattan
was his final tournament. Oddly, it wasn't on center court, where he
starred for so many years, but on an outer court as darkness approached
and a chilly wind began to blow. Most people who watched him all day
were in the bars by this time, unaware of the historical moment that
transpired just a block away.
Now, however, the torch has been passed along to players like Metzger
and, possibly, Gibb. It must also be pointed out that Kiraly has won
Manhattan a record eight times, including an incredible four in a row
from 1990-93 and his first with Smith in 1980. And they all keep the
long-standing appreciation for what it means to win the Wimbledon of
beach volleyball.
Historic AVP
Manhattan Open Photos

Best seats in the
house!

We'll take two (trays,
that is!).

And what's a beach volleyball tournament without the bars!?


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