International Volleyball

LeBron James cheers on Nuss-Kloth as they hold off China

LeBron James cheers on Nuss-Kloth as they hold off China

Taryn Kloth and Kristen Nuss finished their victory before just a handful of observers/Lee Feinswog photo

LeBron James stayed.

The other 12,000 who had previously packed into Eiffel Tower Stadium for the nightcap beach volleyball match, between Kristen Nuss and Taryn Kloth and China’s Chen Xue and Xinyi Xia? Gone. Packed it in after an hour or so weather delay that drenched Paris in lightning and showers and left the stadium an eerie resemblance to the fanless Tokyo Games.

But James, the flagbearer for the USA, remained with his family, watching on as Nuss and Kloth closed out their closest match of the Games, a 15-21, 21-16, 15-12 thriller over China.

“The fact that LeBron stayed is pretty special,” said Nuss, who also added that she could now check “playing at the base of the Eiffel Tower in front of zero people at midnight” off her bucket list.

Another check off that list? Winning pool in the Olympic Games.

Nuss and Kloth are now 3-0 in pool play, with the win over China and a pair of sweeps over Australia’s Mariafe Artacho and Taliqua Clancy and Canada’s Sophie Bukovec and Heather Bansley. They are now guaranteed to begin playoffs in the round of 16, and will play the winner of one of the lucky loser matchups.

But winning pool, while nice, is not what they came to Paris for.

“We came here for some hardware,” Nuss said. “We’re not content. I don’t think we’ve put our best play out there. Now it’s win or go home. Everything needs to be on the table.”

Thursday’s match was certainly not their best. Serve-receive struggles put them in a hole early to Xia and Xue, and after trailing at the opening switch, the Americans were never able to regain the lead, dropping their first and only set of the Games. Not that they were overly concerned.

This is the sort of issue that occasionally rears its head. It did so in the Gstaad Elite16, and they recovered perfectly fine, with a second straight gold medal. They recovered just as well in Paris, leaning, as ever, on their world-class defense to bail them out until the passing steadied.

“I did not pass the ball well,” Kloth, forever frank with herself, said afterwards. “That was a huge factor and I had to calm down. I leaned into Kristen and said I need you right now. I was struggling, so I was leaning on her.”

Kristen Nuss-Taryn Kloth-Paris Olympic Games
Kristen Nuss pokes a line shot over Chen Xue/FIVB photo

Nuss is content playing that role, for she knows that, no matter how choppy things may be getting on offense, they can always…

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