COASTERS: Do you know Gina?
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Steve Virgen
Look into the eyes of Gina Mitchell and witness the essence of
spontaneity. Mitchell, a remarkable 24-year-old mother who plays first
base for the Orange Coast College softball team, emulates Carpe Diem.
Her past breeds inspiration for those who dare to dream. She served
three years in the army. At Huntington Beach High, she played frosh-soph
football her freshman and sophomore years, earning respect from the best
varsity players, even future NFL All-Pro tight end Tony Gonzalez, who
shared a Spanish class with Mitchell.
Her most outrageous escapade, she comically admits, is marriage, which
she is now in the middle of a divorce after tying the knot at age 21.
But, knowing Mitchell, she won’t show fear in trying again.
Imagine contemplating bungee jumping as she describes herself.
“I would say I’m willing to take a chance at anything at least once,”
Mitchell said. “If someone is going put something crazy on your plate,
you have to try it. And, if you don’t like it, you don’t like it. But,
you can’t say you never did it because you did do it.”
Mitchell’s free spirit has been a strong influence for the Pirates who
are a tight group because of their 10-player roster. Mitchell is
affectionately known as “Mom” and she is actually a single mother raising
her three-year-old son, DeAndre.
Mitchell, a nutrition major who is set to earn an Associate of Science
degree as soon as she completes the 15 units she is enrolled in this
semester, gathers strength and wisdom from a wild past.
Her experience in the army only made her realize just how strong she
is.
“I remember my first night,” Mitchell said of basic training. “A lot
of the girls cried because everyone is yelling at you. I never cried. It
was just a mental game. I can take people screaming at me, it doesn’t
faze me. Basic training was a fun eight weeks.”
So just what brought Mitchell to OCC?
She is there because of Renee, her sister.
Renee Sanchez also played softball at Coast and was on the Pirates’
Orange Empire Conference championship team of 1994.
Gina also tried softball because she wanted to prove to herself that
she could play. She wanted to renew her everlasting competitive drive.
After Huntington Beach, she played at West Valley in Hemet where she
earned All-Skyline League honors as a shortstop.
She is getting back to form, improving and maintaining a .368 average
through the Pirates’ (3-2-1) first six games.
She has seven hits in 19 at bats, including six RBIs and three
doubles.
But, aside from her statistics, Mitchell is enjoying the unique
meshing of the Pirates.
“There’s no real big attitudes here,” Mitchell said of the OCC
softball team. “Almost everyone is versatile and if they’re asked to play
a different position, normally they’ll go without crying about it. And
that’s a big issue. I don’t like babies. I like the girls here a lot. It
makes it easier to play.”
As she prepares to move on to a four-year university, Mitchell is
crowded by life-changing decisions. Her divorce is coming and soon
DeAndre will be asking those hard-to-answer questions.
She is hoping to play softball when she moves on to San Diego, or
perhaps, North Carolina, where her boyfriend lives. Or, she may go back
into the army.
Whatever comes, she can smile, because she is never looking back. Gina
only turns the page and seeks a new chapter.
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