Oct. 14, 2010
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ARLINGTON, Tex. - Amanda Aguilera notched her fourth consecutive double-double with 12 kills and 11 assists against Stephen F. Austin, but UT Arlington fell 3-1 Thursday night at Texas Hall.
The Mavericks, wearing pink jerseys for Dig Pink Night, committed untimely mistakes and poor passing allowed SFA to sneak out with a 25-22, 21-25, 25-20, 25-19 win. The win ran Stephen F. Austin's win streak over the Mavericks to 10.
"We didn't pass the ball very well," UTA coach Diane Seymour said. "Errors were a huge factor. They out-blocked us which means we had too many hitting errors. The receiving errors were a big deal. Any time we have more receiving errors than the other team it's not good because I consider us to be one of the better passing teams."
UTA hit just .115 over the final two sets and finished the match with eight serving errors along with four receiving errors.
Stephen F. Austin (10-12, 3-4) won the first set, running its streak to 28 consecutive sets over UTA. The Mavs bounced back in the second to snap the streak, but were unable to topple the Ladyjacks in the match.
"I think we made errors at bad times," said Aguilera, who ran her streak of 10-plus kills to eight matches. "When we needed to put the ball down we weren't putting the ball down. We just made stupid mistakes that we usually don't make on offense."
Tara Frantz finished with 11 kills and Bianca Sauls narrowly missed a double-double, recording nine kills and nine digs.
Raegan Daniel ended the night with 38 assists. Libero Alicia Shaffer produced 18 digs to lead the Mavs (9-12, 3-4).
Mary Caitlin Bottles and Arielle Daron led Stephen F. Austin with 13 kills.
A season-best crowd of 892 fans, many dressed in pink, came out in support of the Mavs trying to increase breast cancer awareness.
The Mavs play again Saturday when they host Sam Houston State at 4 p.m.
"I believe we're just going to go out there with a fire under our butts," Frantz said. "We've got to just keep our composure better. We've got to make fewer errors. That's all controllable."