Prep column: Acts of novelty
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Barry Faulkner
Though one of the most alluring aspects of athletic competition is
unpredictability, Friday’s Pacific Coast League baseball game between
Corona del Mar High and host University served up a virtually
unprecedented portion.
Two singular sightings, in fact, were generated by a fourth-inning
sequence that included the University bat boy.
The first oddity involved a throw from a CdM outfielder, directed to
home plate to try to nail a runner attempting to score from second. The
throw veered off target and struck the bat boy, who had prematurely
attempted to retrieve the bat from the area around the plate.
The subsequent interference ruling resulted in the third out of the
inning, succinctly killing a University rally.
The news, however, quickly got better for the Sea Kings, thanks to
Coach John Emme. Emme, upon learning of the interference call, correctly
and convincingly pointed out that the ball contacted the bat boy before a
second run scored on the play.
After consulting with his base umpire, the home plate umpire, who made
the interference call, heeded Emme’s point and instructed the official
scorer to subtract a run from the Trojan total.
The novelty of actually winning an argument with an umpire was not
lost on Emme, who instructed me after the game to “Mark it down,” so as
to record it for posterity.
University Coach Chris Conlin, who steadfastly refuted the initial
judgment, displayed a sense of humor about the play after the game, when
he jokingly asked about my availability for future service as bat boy.
The fact that the Trojans won, 4-1, no doubt added to Conlin’s comedic
sensibility.
A lesser-known anomaly involving the CdM loss was the fact that it was
the first Sea King setback since Dave Eagle, father of senior designated
hitter Billy Eagle, began wearing his lucky fishing hat in the stands.
The hat, a faded ash color with the likeness of a yellowfin tuna
embroidered on the crown, had been 3-0, since the elder Eagle broke it
out attempting to end a brief team slump.
No word yet on whether Eagle will unveil a new luck charm when the Sea
Kings visit Costa Mesa tonight at 7 at TeWinkle Park. Based on the
expected evening chill, however, perhaps his favorite stocking cap would
fit the bill.
The Newport Harbor High boys track and field team, unbeaten in Sea
View League dual meets this spring, will attempt to defend its league
title at league finals Thursday at Irvine High.
And while senior standouts Peter Bass, Adam Kerns and David Sprenger
have been consistent leaders for Coach Bim Barry, another contributor,
senior 800-meter runner Noe Perez, was recruited out of Harbor girls
coach Eric Tweit’s P.E. class.
“(Perez showed up on my roll sheet for cross country last season,”
Barry said. “Coach Tweit said he saw him running in his P.E. class and
encouraged him to come out.
“He was the JV league champion in cross country, he’s been our best
half-miler and he’s improved every week. We’re hopeful he can qualify for
CIF.”
For the first time, the spoils for the winner of Wednesday’s Costa
Mesa-Estancia Pacific Coast League swim meet included some grub, as well
as crosstown bragging rights.
Unlike their fellow athletes in football, basketball and baseball,
however, the victorious Estancia boys and Costa Mesa girls teams did not
partake of the now familiar postgame rib feast. Instead, they chowed down
on more traditional Mexican fare, courtesy of a local Baja Fresh
restaurant.
The UC Irvine baseball team’s recent assent to second place in the Big
West Conference, a half-game ahead of Cal State Fullerton, was assisted
by former CdM High standout Matt Larson, who yielded just one earned run
in seven innings Sunday to help Cal State Northridge complete a
three-game sweep of the Titans. Larson is now 4-3 for the Matadors.
Former Newport Harbor football star Chris Manderino is already making
his mark as a redshirt freshman walk-on at Cal.
Manderino, the 2000 Newport-Mesa District Most Valuable Player who
helped Newport Harbor make back-to-back CIF Southern Section title-game
appearances, including a Division VI title in 1999, played fullback and
tailback with the first-team offense in the Golden Bears’ Blue-Gold
spring game Saturday.
Playing tailback in the second half, Manderino carried eight times for
30 yards and two TDs.
If you ever wondered how they rate, at least in terms of playoff
revenue, these are profit projections by sport taken from the proposed
Southern Section budget for the 2002-03 school year.
1. Football ($630,000); 2. Boys and girls basketball ($270,000); 3.
Boys and girls volleyball ($50,000); 4. Baseball ($40,000); 5. Boys and
girls soccer ($35,000); 6. Boys and girls cross country ($34,000); 7.
Boys and girls track and field ($30,000); 8. Softball ($17,000); 9. Boys and girls water polo ($16,000); 10. (tie) Boys and girls swimming,
wrestling (both $9,000); 12. (tie) Boys and girls tennis, boys and girls
golf (both $1,000).
Losses of $2,500 are projected for coed badminton.
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