Prep column: Fighting the good fight
Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - Sometimes, the squeaky wheel is merely banished to
the back of the storage shed.
Newport Harbor High boys and girls volleyball coach Dan Glenn, who
joins Corona del Mar High boys tennis coach Tim Mang as, perhaps, the
foremost critics of the current CIF Southern Section playoff system,
still has not given up hope of getting his obligatory ration of grease.
Shot down before in his attempts to allow schools with smaller
enrollments to seek the best level of competition, i.e. playing schools
with the biggest enrollments in the upper divisions of the playoffs,
Glenn’s blackboard has spawned yet another potential solution.
Glenn’s proposed CIF Southern Section Boys Volleyball Championships
would not conflict with the current enrollment-based divisional system,
but merely act as a supplement.
First, he would shorten the current Southern Section division playoffs
by one week, without eliminating any matches.
Then, he would create a one-week tournament to crown a section
champion, from a pool of top teams from any and all divisions. This is
similar to a Masters format that exists in track and field and wrestling,
where qualifiers from all section divisions compete for the right to
represent the Southern Section in state championships.
Since there is no boys volleyball state championship, competition for
one section title (all divisions), would be the final rung on the sport’s
competitive ladder.
Glenn proposes the section tournament consist of the section’s five
division finalists (10 teams), who would be seeded, then aligned in a
bracket, beginning the Monday after the section title matches.
On Monday, the No. 10 seed would play No. 8 and No. 9 would play No. 7
for the right to advance. The 10-8 winner would then meet the No. 1 seed
on Tuesday, when No. 2 would meet the 9-7 winner, No. 4 would play No. 5
and No. 3 would battle No. 6.
The semifinals would be Thursday and the finals Saturday.
The top five seeds would be given travel priority (home-court
advantage) just like the current system used for the girls state
volleyball playoffs.
The one-week window would not extend the season, since the section
playoffs would be condensed into one less week (opening with Tuesday
wild-card matches, Wednesday first-round contests and Friday second-round
battles, rather than the current format which plays first-round matches
on Friday after four days off).
Though it would require additional administration by the section
office, it would pad section coffers by drawing the kind of crowds that
don’t exist when Corona del Mar plays at Brethren Christian in its annual
waltz to the Division IV title match.
Most important, according to Glenn, crowning one Southern Section
champion would preserve some of the sport’s history, which includes five
major division titles for tiny Laguna Beach, not to mention CdM’s pair of
4-A crowns.
Glenn, whose team played in the last two Division I title matches, but
is stuck in Division III this spring, plans to introduce the proposal as
a non-action item at the April 26 Southern Section Council meeting. It
could be voted upon at the first council meeting next fall.
For his part, Mang said recently that CIF officials are considering
changes in the current tennis playoffs. But Southern Section Commissioner
Jim Staunton, as well as more than one assistant commissioner, have said
there is no outcry for change in the current system.
Gordon McNeill, the Corona del Mar High varsity boys basketball
assistant who previously said he would have no interest in filling the
coaching job vacated when Paul Orris resigned Feb. 26, has changed his
mind and will apply after all.
“I talked about it with Paul and he made me realize this could be an
opportunity for me,” McNeill said. One reason for McNeill’s original
reservations was the unsettled status of where his wife, an aspiring
doctor, would serve her residency next year. It now appears she’ll be at
UCI, allowing McNeill to put down roots.
Costa Mesa High baseball coach Kirk Bauermeister isn’t the only
Mustang head man not afraid to play big bad Mater Dei.
Boys basketball coach Bob Serven said he has scheduled Coach Gary
McKnight’s reigning CIF State Division I champions for a Dec. 7 home
game.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.