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LaToya
Harris enters her second year as head coach
at Lewis-Clark State College after
a very successful opening campaign.
Last season she
led the Warriors to their fifth straight
Frontier Conference regular season title and
an overall record of 23-6, including a 13-1
mark in conference play. Harris garnered the
Frontier's Coach of the Year Award, five of
her players earned all-conference honors,
and seven earned all-conference academic
honors.
The team also
made its fifth consecutive appearance at the
national tournament where it went 2-1 to
advance past pool play before falling in
five sets to No. 6 Azusa Pacific in the
first round of bracket play. The team
received a ranking of No. 10 in the NAIA
postseason poll.
Harris was a standout player at Washington
State University during 1999-2002. During
her freshman season, WSU’s graduate
assistant coach was Jen Greeny (nee
Stinson), who Harris replaced at the Warrior
helm. Greeny is now head coach at WSU.
Prior to LCSC, Harris had been head
volleyball coach at Sam Barlow High School
in Gresham, Ore., since 2006 and also had
been coach of the Alpine Volleyball Club
team since 2007. She came highly
recommended, by both Greeny and her old
coach at WSU, Cindy Fredrick.
In her five years at Sam Barlow, Harris has led
the team to a 55-28 mark in conference play with second-place finishes
in each of the past two seasons. The team made the playoffs all five
seasons and advanced to the Oregon state tournament twice where it
finished seventh in 2008 and again in ’09.
During the five years, she had players earn 10
first-team all-conference honors, four second-team honors, and 18
receive honorable mention selection. Her players have gone on to sign
at one NCAA Division I school, four at NCAA D-II, two at NCAA Division
III, one at the NAIA, and four at community colleges.
Harris’ Alpine Club also has been very successful,
especially during the past two seasons. She’s also had 17 players from
the club team sign to play college volleyball.
Harris was a standout volleyball, basketball and
softball player at Parkrose High School in Portland where she earned
12 letters and was a starter in all four sports for four seasons. She
was the KATU Athlete of the Week during her senior year in an area
that covered both Washington and Oregon prep athletes and also was the
TV station’s Athlete of the Year for that season. Parkrose retired her
high school volleyball jersey that season and the jersey was
re-retired in 2010 with a new banner.
She signed to play volleyball at WSU where she was
a starter all four seasons and earned All-Freshman Pac-10 Conference
honors her first season and first-team All-Pac-10 her final three
seasons. She also was the team MVP her sophomore and senior seasons
and earned Pac-10 Player of the Week both seasons as well.
She was named the MVP at seven tournaments during
her Cougar career, including the Las Vegas Invitational (2001), Cougar
Challenge (2000-02), Fresno State Invitational (2001), Alaska
Invitational (2002), and San Francisco Invitational (2002).
Harris also helped WSU to the NCAA tournament her
final three seasons with an Elite Eight appearance in 2002.
She became the third player in WSU history to
record at least 1,000 kills and 1,000 digs during her career and
finished fourth in school history in both categories. She also held
the record for most career service aces with 143.
While at WSU, she also competed in track for one
season as a higher jumper.
Following her playing career, she served as an
undergraduate assistant coach for Fredrick at WSU in the 2003 season,
and then became head coach at San Leandro High in California for two
seasons before taking over at Sam Barlow.
Harris has a Bachelor of Arts degrees in
Humanities with an emphasis in Communication and in Women Studies with
a minor in Sport Management.
Harris and her fiancé Renaldo Alexander Sr., have
a 6-year-old son Renaldo Alexander Jr.
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Coach
LaToya Harris
Year-by-Year at
Lewis-Clark State |
|
Year |
Overall
Record |
Overall
Winning % |
Frontier
Record |
Frontier
Winning % |
Frontier Season |
Frontier Tourney |
Nationals
Record |
|
2011 |
23-6 |
.799 |
13-1 |
.928 |
1st |
2nd |
2-2 |
|
Total |
23-6 |
.799 |
13-1 |
.928 |
|
|
2-2 |
Assistant Coach Keo Millan
Keo Millan is in his first year as an assistant
coach at Lewis-Clark State College.
Millan is a
highly-competitive and lifelong volleyball player whose passion for
and experience with the sport spans nearly 25 years. His
volleyball roots are in Southern California where he earned team MVP
and All-Metro League honors in high school as a starting setter.
He played collegiately for
four years at Washington State University. As the team’s
starting setter and co-captain, Millan earned Tournament MVP and
All-Tournament Team honors while helping lead the Cougars to the top
of the Pacific Intercollegiate Volleyball Association and two
consecutive top-five finishes at Division I Collegiate Club Nationals.
During that time, he also worked as an IHSAA certified volleyball
referee and coached Pullman High School’s junior varsity and the
University of Idaho women’s club volleyball teams.
Millan then served as a police officer prior to
moving to Clarkston in 2011. His decision to return to coaching
volleyball has made an immediate impact on the Lewis-Clark Valley’s
volleyball scene. He was the 2011 junior varsity volleyball
coach at Clarkston High School. He is the Co-Director of Snake
River Juniors Volleyball Club and the head coach of the U16 team.
He guided the U16 team to a 2012 top 10 final ranking out of 87 teams
in the Evergreen Region. He has also coached for Clarkston
High School’s Junior Bantams Camp, LCSC’s Warrior Volleyball Club, and
provides private individual training.
Millan is IMPACT and CAP 1 certified through USA
Volleyball. He specializes in developing the setter position as
well as game tactics and strategy, team mindset training, and strength
and conditioning. Millan has been married for 14 years to
Kimberly, a native of Lewiston who is also an avid volleyball player.
They have two children, Eva and Ikaika.
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