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Top 10 Fascinating Facts about Casey Patterson


 

Beach volleyball, which is in qualifying stages, is one of the games that can be watched on Day 1 of the 2016 Olympic Games in Rio. The women’s and men’s competitions began early in the day, however, a men’s tournament which featured the United States began at 3:30 p.m. EST. Thanks to NBC, fans from all around the would were able to watch it live. Casey Patterson and Jake Gibb represented America against Qatar’s Cherif/Jefferson.

Despite the fact that Gibb has competed in the Olympics twice before, this was Casey Patterson’s very first time. Patterson had been looking forward to this tour to Rio for a very long time. According to an NBC Olympics feature on him, he played his first competent volleyball match in 2003. It took 13 years and a new partner to get to the Olympics, however, he’s finally there, ready to amuse, shock, and, most pertinently, win gold for the United States.

1.Casey’s upbringing and his way up in his professional career now

Casey Patterson (born April 20, 1980) is a skilled beach volleyball athlete from Huntington Beach, California. Patterson and his former teammate, Jake Gibb, were titled the USAV and AVP Teams of the Year for 2013. Casey was titled AVP’s Best Offensive Player in 2013. All through his professional career, he has fifteen first-place finishes.

2.The talented athlete has won and featured in quite a few volleyball matches

Throughout his time at BYU, Casey was titled to two All-Tournament teams. Casey, he made his AVP Main Draw performance at the MBO in 2004 and won his first AVP title in 2009 in Brooklyn. The pair won by defeating the top four seeds in 4 successive tournaments while teamed up with Ty Loomis. Casey and Gibb won 8 of 14 events in 2013 and 2014 and finished third in five more. Casey was titled Best Offensive Player in 2013 and Team of the Year that same year with Jake Gibb. Casey and Jake also competed in global tournament together in 2013 and attended the 2016 Rio Olympics.

3.Aside from being a talented athlete, he is also a very religious man

Secretary Kerry Speaks With Team USA Men’s Volleyball Players. Photo by U.S. Department of State from United States – Wikimedia commons

You may not even predict a trash-talking beach volleyball player with surfer-styled blonde hair to be a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints. Despite this, Patterson is a deeply religious Mormon. Patterson is a spiritual leader in Little Rock, Arkansas, and does not drink. He has also stated that the beach volleyball environment’s “party vibe” is exaggerated, thereby making it much simpler for an individual of Mormon faith to fit in.

4.Patterson has had quite a few teammates throughout his professional career

Patterson teamed up with Ty Loomis and competed in 13 tournaments together. In their sixth tournament together, they managed to beat a third-round loss to win the championship in what was both athletes’ first final. Patterson and Loomis won four consecutive tournaments against the tournament’s top four seeds to win. In Hermosa Beach, the pair played a rookie’s tournament in which they won the next set 38-36 after losing the first set. They repeated the great achievement just under three hours later, sweeping the second set 40-38 and setting an AVP major draw record for most points scored in a set.

5.Patterson has been titled numerous different nicknames due to his persona

Patterson has several nicknames in the volleyball community. One is known as “The 6’6′′ Ninja” due to his unusual height. Another nickname that has stuck is “Mr. Boom,” which refers to his significantly bigger than life alter ego, which was basically loud. In an article for The Players’ Tribune, Jake Gibb admitted to being irritated by Patterson at first, citing his confrontational bravado at such an early age.

Of course, this negative impression did not last, and Gibb and Patterson went on to become a talented team. Patterson still upholds his loud, forceful approach to the game in the exact same Tribune article: “My technique is indeed very loud, enthusiastic, in your face. It’s almost like a South American football technique. “I want to display how much I absolutely adore volleyball and simply allow everything to come out of me when I’m playing.”

Casey has always been recognized for his vibrant public persona and dance moves. Casey has been a crowd favourite and an aggravation to his oppositions since his beach volleyball breakout hit 16 years ago.

6.Casey was luck enough to earn himself a scholarship with a prominent university in United States

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Volleyball net. Photo by Mastermind76 – Pixabay

Patterson went off to college after his quest in Arkansas, attending Brigham Young University in Utah on a volleyball scholarship after a school term at Utah Valley University. His height and broad jump soon made him a college sensation. Patterson earned a degree in recreational management, as per his Team USA portfolio.

7.He had an opportunity to play volleyball internationally

Patterson reconnected with Chase Budinger in recent years (2021), and the tag team was the world class team on the AVP Tour. They won twice in the championships of all three AVP competitions. They finished the season 15-3, with three losses to Tri Bourne and Trevor Crabb. Budinger led the Tour in kills (7.81 per set), hitting percentage (.455), aces (.56 per set), and digs (9th) (3.86 per set). Patterson competed in two global qualifiers with Budinger, both times losing in the first round.

8.Patterson and Gibb were the ideal duo for more than 2 years

Patterson teamed up with Jake Gibb in 2013 and won their first tournament together, a FIVB event in Shanghai. On the FIVB Tour, the pair progressed to four semi-finals, completing once in each of the top four ranks. They finished 17th in the World Championships as the fourth-ranked team on tour and the highest-ranked American team. Patterson and Gibb were the top-ranked team on the AVP Tour, having advanced to all seven semi-finals. They won four titles in four events in a row. They finished the year with a 30-5 match record, including a 16-game winning streak. Patterson ranked first on the tour in both kills per game (8.05) and hitting percentage (.471). (.475).

Patterson and Gibb proceeded their collaboration in 2014, and the pair started the AVP season with a second, a third, a win, and a seventh-place finish. After winning 15 matches in a row, they finished the AVP season with three straight wins. Patterson and Gibb, the only team to win different championships, finished the year as the top-ranked team. Patterson ranked second in kills per game (7.35), third in aces per game (.77), and fourth in hitting percentage (.490). (.453). Gibb and Patterson competed in ten FIVB Tour events, winning bronze in Poland and finishing fifth once.

Patterson and Gibb won the first two AVP events of the 2015 season, prolonging their winning streak to five. In their next event, their 27-match winning streak was snapped. They reached the semi-finals of five AVP tournaments and finished as the tour’s second-ranked team. Gibb was fourth in kills per set (7.15), fifth in aces per set (.66), and fifth in hitting percentage (.453). Patterson and Gibb competed in ten FIVB Tour events, winning one gold and one silver medal.

Patterson and Gibb were the world class team on the AVP Tour in 2016, winning three times and finishing second and third in their six events. Patterson led the Tour in kills (7.69 per set), hit percentage (.494), and aces (sixth) (.65 per set). Patterson and Gibb competed in 13 international tournaments, which include two fourths and six fifths events that led up to the Rio Olympics, where they finished 19th.

9.Aside from being a very talented volleyball player, he also has wife

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In addition to volleyball, Patterson managed to meet a Utah native named Lexi Brown at BYU. They hit it off and ended up marrying in 2005. Lexi was also a standout college volleyball player, earning Academic All-MWC honors after leading the team in striking percentage seven times as a senior.

As per Deseret News, she and Casey both managed to play in Sweden after college. Patterson then started playing in Puerto Rico before retiring. In 2010, she was a member of the Mormon organization Youth Women.

10.His talented wife quit her job to start a family with Patterson

Lexi left her job to have her first child. Cash, the child, was born in July of 2009. Guy, their second son, was born two years later, in 2011. Ray, their daughter, was born three years later, in 2014.

Patterson stated to The Daily Universe, BYU’s campus newspaper, that his family comes first: “Putting a meal on the table is number one, so if I don’t win, we don’t eat… A family requires a great deal, so you have to take it more seriously because there are four other people who rely on your success. It’s fantastic because it forces you to work harder than you ever have before.”