JC Column: Get Your Kicks at OCC
Steve Virgen
Hello, sports fans.
If you don’t know by now, I’m the new face in the Daily Pilot’s sports
department. The name’s Steve Virgen (pronounced veed-hen), that’s vir-gin
if you’re speaking English. But that doesn’t matter. This is not about
me. This is about Orange Coast College sports.
This is about Dave Salo, the new men’s and women’s swimming coach.
He’s back from Sydney where he coached the U.S. team, mostly the women.
But he also coached Aaron Peirsol, who won a silver medal in the
200-meter backstroke. The Americans led all countries in swimming with 33
medals, including 14 gold medals.
Salo has made writing this column a little easier because, despite his
busy Olympics schedule, he actually responded to E-mail, while in Sydney.
Here’s his description of the opening ceremonies:
“The preparations leading up to actually parading onto the track is a
bit tedious - we stay for about 2-plus hours at the dome stadium across
the way watching the Opening Ceremonies on big screens, and sit and wait
and wait and wait.
The walk to the stadium for the march-in is about 20 minutes and as we
went along the inner tunnels, we were swarmed with hundreds of fans
chanting and cheering every nation before they walk in.
“Upon walking in, the emotion hits as you face over 100,000 screaming
fans and you realize you are at the Olympics. Everyone searches the faces
of those they can see in the stands looking for a familiar face. The
water effect and the flame were the highlights of the ceremony.”
Salo returned from the Olympics last week. He’s back at work in Irvine
with the Novaquatics and he’s preparing to put his winning stamp on OCC.
With “U.S. Olympics Coach” on his resume, the Pirates would be
hard-pressed to find a better coach. OCC swimming will only benefit from
Salo.
“I think that any experience from an Olympics or working with the
Olympic team or national team is an opportunity to gain insight and
knowledge about working with athletes and coaches,” Salo said in the
E-mail. “ I have found things like training ideas that I am sure I will
use with our program, especially stretching and dry land. But I think the
best part is developing an even greater comfort level with the Olympic
experience and being able to impart that on the athletes that I train.”
This is about Pirates’ football punter Eddie Johnson, who at this time
last year he played “really bad,” he said. Some games he would get just
two hours of sleep the night before because he enjoyed the party life.
But, for Johnson, the lack of enthusiasm and motivation started when
he was a junior at Newport Harbor. At his winter formal, he was charged
with a 4210 -- he came to a school function under the influence. He had
to finish out the year at Corona del Mar. And then in his senior year, he
tore his Achilles tendon. While at a party, Johnson playfully jumped over
a bush and landed on his heel as his right ankle rolled and he heard a
“pop.” The rehabilitation led him to his first year at OCC (last year)
when he tore ligaments in his left foot, the foot that he plants on for
punts.
This season, however, it’s a whole new story as Johnson is more
disciplined about his game. He’s taking life seriously, he says.
Johnson’s revived motivation has made him a bright spot in OCC’s
frustrating season, which might change now after an upset victory over
Mt. San Antonio. He leads the Mission Conference in punting. Against El
Camino two weeks ago, he blasted a punt for 73 yards, just three yards
off the school record. The mark is also the sixth best in Mission
Conference history. He also placed three punts inside the El Camino
20-yard line.
Ironically, Johnson is inspired by the trials that he has endured and
the regrets he has created.
“At a certain point, I said ‘what the hell am I doing?,”’ he said.
This is about Pirates’place-kicker, Rob “Robbie” Pate, who began this
season as the back-up kicker. Robbie never played varsity football while
in high school at Edison. His coach put Travis Wilson on the varsity team
because his kickoffs had a better chance of going for touchbacks. And at
OCC, Steve Terwiske was put ahead of Robbie for the same reason.
At Edison, Robbie never got a chance to play in the big-time. But at
OCC, Terwiske was injured, yet so was Robbie. It’s just that Robbie
wasn’t as injured. And so he became the starter.
In the upset 26-25 victory over Mt. SAC he nailed a 42-yard field
goal. Then he won the game with a 30-yarder with one second remaining.
The game-winner was supposed to be from 25 yards out but OCC took the
game-delay penalty when Pirates’ coaches realized that the team had only
10 players on the field.
“That got my heart racing,” Robbie said. But then he calmed himself
and knocked in the field goal, even though it was tipped by a Mounties’
defender.
“I’m over it, because I’m playing now,” Robbie said of his reaction to
playing junior varsity last year. “Last year it was different I wanted to
play. I always just want to play.”
Two weeks into my job here at The Pilot and I’m wondering what else
OCC has in store. I’ll be sure to let you know.
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