This sentiment of openness and going with the flow permeated throughout the Zoom meeting and seems to represent the team’s effect on its players, even so many years later. But there may be no better embodiment of this mindset than Rose’s life after UCSD.
President Nixon ended the draft, which allowed Rose to stay in San Diego after graduation and marry Lynn while working at Scripps as a research technician. He even got some of the other graduated players to join him on a club volleyball team. But Rose wouldn’t stay put for long.
He and his wife took the advice of a German co-worker and tried living abroad. The couple worked for the World Health Organization in Geneva, Switzerland, and did graduate work at the University of Geneva, earning PhDs in immunology and molecular biology, respectively.
But that didn’t mean he was done playing volleyball. Just as he’d done in La Jolla, Rose found a release through volleyball, playing in a small elementary school gym with a club team. But that simple once-a-week workout turned into much more. Thanks to a well-connected club coach Rose got a chance to play for Star-Onex, a national club team with an A squad in the top league in Switzerland.
“Due to my experience in volleyball at UCSD, I ended up playing in the top division in Switzerland for seven years, making long time friendships with Swiss players, learning French, and traveling all over Switzerland, France, and Germany playing volleyball,” Rose said. “I also played on the University of Geneva volleyball team made up of National A League players, and we won two Swiss National titles.”
Now, with the help of their team and teams of the past, players have to prepare for their own uncertain futures. For some, their time at UCSD is over, and for others a chance at a redemptive season looms large in their training. But in the back of everyone’s mind is the comforting fact that they’ve got a generation-spanning support system that can last at least 50 years, and even a shortened season can’t take that away.