Lightning atop Newport Coast
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT COAST - One of these days, Sage Hill School football coach
Tom Monarch and his staff of two, Mike Marchetti and Al Korn, will look
back on this inaugural 2000 season and enjoy a good laugh.
Besides, from the students’ point of view, if it wasn’t meant to be
fun and part of the total Sage Hill experience -- encompassing student
balance in athletics, arts and academics -- it wouldn’t be part of the
curriculum.
So football is not a matter of winning here at Orange County’s newest
high school. Not yet, anyway.
The first private nondenominational school in the county, however, is
certainly on its way to special things with a gorgeous facility in the
Newport Coast hills, a high-end, high-tech, warm-and-fuzzy setting for
the meager tuition price of $14,000 a year.
But, aside from the glitz and glamour of Sage Hill’s stunning
surroundings and ocean views, and a courtyard that resembles an Ivy
League school with limestone archways and umbrellas on the patio, the
Sage Hill athletic department believes one day the football program will
compete with the best high schools in the area.
And, yes, that includes Newport Harbor.
For now, Monarch is not teaching his young Lightning players to bolt
downfield with reckless abandon on defense, because most of the players
are so green, they’re asking the coach the difference between offense and
defense.
“We aren’t working on any complicated screen plays and I’m not
teaching them how to cross block,” Monarch said. “Instead, I’m teaching
them how to get in a three-point stance, what the difference is between
offense and defense, and how to form tackle.”
It is a challenge for Monarch, but he’s more than willing to pay the
price and absorb some losses. It’s freshmen football and they’re
learning. Starting from rock bottom, quite literally.
“It’s sort of like talking to the ‘Bad News Bears’ sometimes, because
I’ve got kids asking me, during a game, what’s offense and defense, and
why the kids on the other team are yelling emotional outbursts,” Monarch
said.
Sage Hill wasn’t even expected to field a gridiron team this year,
despite the school’s top-of-the-line features, i.e. a sodded field, ocean
views and state-of-the-art field-goal nets behind the goal posts.
The Lightning opened their campaign with 19 players, but, because of
injuries to four key starters, only 15 suited up Friday in host Sage
Hill’s 26-0 loss to Saddleback Valley Christian.
Next year, Monarch hopes the numbers will double, while “four or five
good athletes” from the area have apparently made verbal commitments to
enroll as freshmen at Sage Hill for the 2001 season, when the Lightning
will play a junior varsity schedule.
Of the school’s enrollment of 120 students (90 freshmen and 30
sophomores), all are encouraged to participate in sports, and, 90% of
Sage Hill’s football players are first-year players.
In two years, Sage Hill will compete in the Academy League with other
small schools, but, eventually, the Lightning can see themselves among
the elite in the Orange County athletic landscape.
The football facility, already, has to be considered one of the
county’s best -- simply with its view.
“It’s a great spot to watch a football game,” Sage Hill Athletic
Director Brian Scherbart said. “It’s as good as you’ll get.”
One day, a press box will be built and perhaps more bleachers will be
installed. For now, the demand is low. About 75 people were on hand to
watch Friday’s game and the bleachers were closed off with yellow
construction tape, although some took a chance and sat there anyway.
On the visitors’ side of the field, a greenbelt sits atop a bluff
overlooking the Newport Coast hills and Pacific Ocean, an area so
inviting it could be used for a Sunday picnic.
The Sage Hill campus, adjacent to the San Joaquin Hills Toll Road and
above the Newport Coast Drive exit, isn’t fully constructed. But most of
what is complete could pass as the finest in educational opulence.
Case in point: Tucked away in a far corner of the library is a
fireplace. “We’re trying to create places on campus to encourage
studying,” Scherbart said. “Where else in America is there a better place
to study on a campus?”
Looking out a window near the library fireplace is a diamond of a
baseball facility, one helped in various ways by former Angel and current
Cleveland Indian pitcher Chuck Finley, a local resident.
There is also a fully sodded practice field that will be converted
into a softball field.
Sage Hill also has plans to build a math and science center, a
six-court tennis compound, a high-class beach volleyball pit and an
aquatics center.
Will the Lightning compete with would-be Corona del Mar athletes in
the future? It’s easy to see with the writing on the drawing board.
“From a sports standpoint ... we want to win, but we want students to
realize other things in life,” Scherbart said.
“We’re trying to get athletics, academics and the arts all on the same
page. We want that to be the emphasis in the Sage Hill community.”
As far as football’s concerned, even the bleachers at Sage Hill are
designed with handrails, a symbolic testament to the staff’s safeguarded
environment for the students.
“I told our other coaches that we’ll always remember this year,”
Monarch said. “If we win CIF in six years from now, we’ll remember this
year even more, because of the things that went on in practice.”
In six games, Sage Hill has yet to win a football game. But give it
time.
As one parent said, regarding Saddleback Valley Christian’s Warriors,
who played with seniors: “Yeah, they’ve got some big guys over there. But
wait until our boys grow up.”
Sage Hill is also fielding teams in all fall sports, and plans to fill
winter and spring team rosters.
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