1,000 … again
BrownsvilleĢƵ Gates records 1,000th volleyball kill to match 1,000 points in basketball
Skyler Gates knows the importance of 1,000.
The Brownsville multi-sport star hit that number in points during her junior year in basketball.
Monday night she did it again … in volleyball.
Gates, a 6-foot-4 senior, rang up 22 kills in the Lady Falcons’ 3-1 win over California to make her a rare double-1,000 athlete.
The latter is a much rarer feat.
“The more I think about it the bigger that number sounds,” Gates said of her 1,000th kill. “When I kind of take that in, itĢƵ just an amazing feeling to know I accomplished that.”
“ItĢƵ the first time in Brownsville history that a volleyball player has reached 1,000 kills,” Lady Falcons head coach Rachael Salvucci said. “I’m not sure how many have done it in the WPIAL.”
With a big crowd on hand, Gates was pushing to reach the milestone at home.
“I definitely wanted to get it in front of our fans,” Gates said. “We had a game at Charleroi the next night so near the end of the match I told our setters letĢƵ try to get this done here tonight and get it out of the way.”
Gates recalled kill No. 1,000.
“It was my setter Kenzie Adams who got the ball to me and I hit it middle back, just barely inside the line,” Gates said.
Brownsville picked up wins over Charleroi on Tuesday and Bentworth on Thursday as Gates upped her career kills total to 1,035.
Gates, the 17-year-old daughter of Ricky Gates and Very Gates, is a Virginia volleyball recruit who will enroll early at the school in January.
Right now, however, itĢƵ not the Cavaliers that are on her mind. With the 1,000th kill now in her back pocket, Gates is focused on the Lady Falcons’ season.
“My biggest goal is to try and win the section this year,” Gates said. “We all want that.”
Brownsville is unbeaten at 7-0 overall and 4-0 in Section 3-2A. The Lady Falcons host Waynesburg Central, also undefeated, in a key section match Tuesday night.
“ItĢƵ kind of good to get the 1,000 done because I want to focus a little more on blocking now and just helping our team win,” Gates said. “We’ve had an amazing start so far. We won the FCCA tournament. We’re playing really well together.”
Salvucci is blending in young players with the veterans and so far the formula is working.
“We have some freshmen playing and I think they’re getting comfortable enough where when they make mistakes they learn from them and just get better,” Gates said. “They’re really coachable and playing well with the upperclassmen. They’re asking questions and trying to improve.”
BrownsvilleĢƵ attack, obviously, revolves around Gates but she gets plenty of help, Salvucci pointed out.
“SheĢƵ our weapon,” Salvucci said. “We have other good front hitters on the team but we try to get the ball to Skyler as much as we can. One thing about Skyler, even though she gets a lot of kills she is not a selfish player whatsoever, she supports everyone else on the team.
“Our team wants to make good passes and get the ball to Skyler. ItĢƵ not just Skyler, itĢƵ everyone working together to help set her up, and she delivers. We have a good team and they work together and genuinely want to see each other succeed. This 1,000 record is a team effort.”
Gates agrees.
“No way I could’ve done this without my teammates,” she said. “ItĢƵ not just me, itĢƵ all of us.”
Gates gives Salvucci much credit for the teamĢƵ success.
“I love her,” Gates said. “SheĢƵ a great coach and has done so much for me, and she pushes us really hard, and Hig (Dave Higinbotham), too, our assistant coach.”
Virginia head coach Shannon Wells continues to stay in contact with Gates.
“We’ll text back and forth every once in a while, mostly talking about my schedule right now for when I go to school there,” Gates said. “I’ll be going there soon with the early commitment and I’ve been keeping up on them, trying to find videos after every one of their games, but really I’ve been more focused on myself and improving and helping our team here at Brownsville win.
“I’m still trying to improve my blocking and passing and serving. I’m stronger in the front row but I want to be an all-around player so I’m working on getting better in the back row.”
Salvucci, a former Brownsville coach who returned to the Lady Falcons for Gates’ sophomore season, has seen her evolve as a player.
“The one thing I’ve noticed is her confidence level is much higher now than it used to be,” Salvucci said of Gates. “She knows what to run and when she wants to run it and communicates that really well to her team. You can’t run an offense without good passes, good sets. SheĢƵ worked on building up her team. SheĢƵ matured a lot over these three years.”
“I’m not afraid to speak out a little more and be more of a leader now,” Gates said.
In addition to her 22 kills on Monday, Gates recorded nine service points, including five aces, and added four blocks.
“SheĢƵ one of our best passers and sheĢƵ really worked on her serves this year and is serving more aggressively,” Salvucci said. “That was a struggle for her in the past but sheĢƵ worked hard on it and has come a long way on that. SheĢƵ just playing a strong back row.
“Skyler is a team player and thatĢƵ been really important.”
The downside for Brownsville from Gates’ early commitment to Virginia is that she won’t be able to play her full senior basketball season with the Lady Falcons.
“I’m going to play in the FalconFest tournament and possibly in the assembly game we’re going to have this year but I’ll have to leave pretty soon after that,” she said.
Salvucci is eager to see Gates play at the NCAA Division-I college level.
“I’m her biggest fan,” Salvucci said. “I’m a huge college volleyball fan. Penn State (which won its eighth NCAA womenĢƵ volleyball championship last year) is my alma mater and I go to as many of their volleyball games as I can. I told Skyler that I’m going to have to squeeze at least one Virginia trip in there to see her.
“I’m so excited to watch her and see what she does in college.”


