| 
Sue Gozansky
Head Coach • sue.gozansky@ucr.edu
The 2007-08 season will mark the 38th season for AVCA Hall
of Famer Sue Gozansky at UC Riverside. The dean of the Highlander
coaching staff, Gozansky has the second longest tenure among
volleyball coaches at the Division I level, trailing only
UCLA Head Coach Andy Banachowski who has led the Bruins for
40 seasons.
Gozansky sports a 666-475-16 record dating
back to 1970. During that span, UCR has won three National
Championships (the AIAW Small College Championship in 1977
and the Division II National Championships in 1982 and 1986)
and had a streak of 20 straight playoff appearances. She was
voted coach of the year in the CCAA five times (1981, 1982,
1988, 1989, 1996). Gozansky also served as head coach for
the UCR men’s volleyball team for five years.
In December of 2006, Gozansky was honored
by the American Volleyball Coaches’ Association, which
inducted her into the Hall of Fame during the Final Four tournament
in Omaha, Nebraska. In October 2005, Gozansky was named to
the NCAA Division II Women’s Volleyball 25th Anniversary
Team by the NCAA.
Her national and international coaching
history is impressive. She has coached at the Olympic Sports
Festival as well as the USA women’s “B”
volleyball team consisting of players being considered for
roster spots on the national team and was men’s and
women’s coach for the quadrennial Maccabiah Games (Jewish
Olympics) in Israel in 1981, 1985, 1989 and 1993.
In 2005 the Highlanders posted a 16-11
record, the best of the Division I era. It was the second
consecutive year that the Highlanders had achieved that distinction,
posting an 11-18 overall mark in 2004.
Gozansky is a cadre member of the USA
Volleyball Coaching Accreditation Program (CAP) and a certified
instructor for the Federation International de Volleyball
(FIVB). She coached the men’s and women’s national
teams of the Kingdom of Tonga in preparation for the Mini
South Pacific Games in the summer of 1997, under the auspices
of the FIVB. She has given over 100 clinics in more than 35
countries, including Germany, Malaga, Spain, the Island of
Dominica, the Dominican Republic, China, and Belize. In 2003
she visited Grenada as part of a program to get volleyball
reintroduced into the secondary school curriculum, followed
by trips to the islands of St. Kitts, St. Lucia and St. Vincent
in 2006 and St. Croix and Antigua in 2007.
In Spring 2000, Gozansky concluded work
on her second book, the "Volleyball Coach’s Survival
Guide", which is used as the textbook for the USA Volleyball
Coaching Accreditation Program Level II Course. Her first
work, "Championship Volleyball Complete Book of Techniques
and Drills" is a top seller.
Despite attending Ganesha High School
in Pomona in an era where there were no organized sports for
women, Gozansky became an accomplished student-athlete at
Cal Poly Pomona, earning back-to-back athlete of the year
honors after lettering in volleyball, basketball, badminton,
softball, tennis and track. She also excelled in the classroom,
receiving a degree in physical education/social sciences in
1968. In 1970 she played on the USA National Volleyball team,
and she continued to compete on the varsity volleyball and
basketball teams at UCLA while pursuing her master’s
degree in kinesiology, which she earned in 1975. In 1981,
Gozansky was honored with the Cal Poly Outstanding Alumnus
Award, and in 1986 she was again honored with her induction
into the inaugural class of the school’s athletic Hall
of Fame.
She joined the UCR staff in 1970 as head
tennis and volleyball coach. During the early years of women’s
sports, Gozansky served as the primary representative for
women’s athletics at UCR and represented the Highlanders
at the first Association for Intercollegiate Athletics for
Women (AIAW) delegate assembly in 1971. When women’s
sports became a part of the NCAA in 1981, she served on the
first women’s volleyball committee. In 1990, she was
recognized by the NCAA for 10 years of accomplishments and
dedication to Division II volleyball.
Gozansky resides in Claremont, CA and
enjoys traveling in her free time.
Nir Ofer
Assistant Coach • nir.ofer@ucr.edu
Nir
Ofer was hired as an assistant volleyball coach in the summer
of 2006. He comes to UC Riverside with a reputation for knowledge,
enthusiasm and innovative and exciting ways of coaching volleyball.
Ofer served as an assistant coach for the Maccabiah USA Open
Women's Volleyball Team in 2004. The team, comprised of Division
I, II and III collegiate players, competed in Santiago, Chile
and earned a silver medal at the Pan American Games. Ofer
then was named chairman of the men's and women's volleyball
teams for the Maccabiah Games, held in Israel in 2005, as
a player-coach, he helped the team to win a bronze medal.
Nir runs camps across the country for Gold Medal Squared which
is organized by past and current USA Volleyball Olympic coaches.
Ofer began his coaching career in 1998 and opened his Performance
Volleyball Academy in 2001. He has coached at various levels
in his career including boys varsity head coach, girls varsity
assistant coach and girls JV head coach. His teams have won
five league titles, including three undefeated seasons and
a CIF playoff quarterfinal appearance. He played collegiate
volleyball at Mt. San Antonio College and also attended Cal
Poly Pomona.
In his free time, Ofer enjoys playing the guitar, reading,
watching movies, attending concerts, and of course volleyball.
He is single and resides in Irvine.
|