The last hurrah
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Mike Sciacca
Tony Lipold has been coaching young kids for the past 30 years. He has
seen different degrees of player talent, seen some teams overachieve and
underachieve, and some live up to their potential.
But in his 30 years, there is one team that he has watched grow from
novice into one of the top teams in the Southland: The South Huntington
Beach Chargers, an eighth-grade National Junior Basketball All-Net
Division boys’ basketball team.
This band of seven -- Tim Golden, T.J. Lipold, Dylan Bowermaster,
Casey Becker, Thomas Marcin, Mike Hardwick and Taylor King -- began their
careers as inexperienced third-graders but have matured, Lipold said,
into fine young basketball players.
With high school approaching next fall the Chargers are playing their
final season together in 2001-02.
“They have really developed into a very fine team and that’s due to
the hard work they have put in on the court,” Lipold said.
Following their maiden season, several of the players became first
round draft choices as fourth-graders, which split up that third-grade
team and pitted the players as rivals on opposing teams. But when they
became fifth-graders, the team was reunited and, with Lipold as its
coach, they decided to play at the All-Net level.
All-Net basketball is played at the sixth-, seventh- and eighth-grade
levels. Lipold said the team wanted the challenge of playing against
stiffer competition so as fifth graders, they played at the sixth-grade
level.
They took their lumps, too, that first season, finishing at .500.
“It was really a learning experience for these kids. They were able to
take on some very talented teams,” he said.
The Chargers play in the Blue Conference, the top division. They took
the experience they gathered as fifth-graders and won the conference as
seventh-graders with a 12-2 record and went all the way to the division’s
national semifinal round, where they lost to eventual champion Henderson,
Nevada.
Last year, the Chargers went undefeated in Blue Conference action and
again played on the national semifinal stage and lost a one-point
heartbreaker to eventual champion Summerline, Nevada, on a buzzer-beating
shot.
It was their lone defeat in a 20-1 season.
“They love to play the game and their greatest attribute is that they
are not selfish. They know what role they play and accept it,” said
Lipold, who coached the Bolsa Grande High boys’ basketball team from
1979-87, was a men’s assistant coach at Long Beach City College for 11
years, where he won a state championship, and currently serves as
athletic director at Saddleback College.
All of his players, save one, are nearing six-feet as 13 year olds.
Lipold points out that Golden is a solid, versatile player; Bowermaster,
a very good outside shooter; Becker, an outstanding athlete; Marcin is
perhaps the best athlete on the team; Hardwick, quick and a gifted
defensive force; the 6-3 King, a really talented player, and his son,
T.J., the team’s most consistent player and a key big game performer.
At one time, in addition to playing NJB together, Golden, Lipold,
Marcin, Becker and Bowermaster all played together at Sts. Simon and
Jude. King was a prolific scorer in last year’s semifinal loss to
Summerline as he scored 36 points and nailed nine, three-point shots.
They have averaged 75 points per game and have scored 100 points on
five occasions the past four years.
This season, which is just two games old, the Chargers are 2-0.
They opened the season with a 60-36 whipping of Bakersfield behind
King’s 28 points and 18 more by Lipold. Last Sunday, they bolted to a
39-18 halftime lead over East Huntington Beach at Ocean View High and
never looked back in a 78-46 triumph. In that win, four players scored in
double figures: Lipold with 24, King had 22, Becker scored 14 and
Bowermaster added 10.
The team, which practices twice weekly, plays its home games at the
Edison High gym and, despite not having its full roster this weekend,
will host Monterey Park at noon on Sunday.
Lipold said that Golden, Marcin, Hardwick and his son, T.J., all could
end up at Edison. So might King, while Becker, whose brother, Stephen,
stars as a sophomore at Marina, will also become a Viking. Bowermaster,
he said, is off to Mater Dei.
“It’s too bad that they all won’t be playing on the same high school
team because that could be some team to watch,” Lipold added. * MIKE
SCIACCA is the education and sports reporter. He can be reached at (714)
965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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