Mustangs complete a U-turn
- Share via
In a little more than 13 months, the watchword for the Costa Mesa
High girls volleyball program has transformed from turnover to
turnaround.
Turnover in the coaching ranks helped generate nearly as many
headlines as victories since Yvette Ybarra resigned after the 1998
season, ending a two-year run that produced two at-large berths into
the CIF Southern Section playoffs. The back-to-back postseason
appearances were the Mustangs’ first since 1991 and when Ybarra
arrived, the program has lost 26 straight matches.
Four coaches came and went in the next two seasons, a couple of
whom never coached a match, as the program floundered to the point
where finding anyone to provide information for a preseason preview
became problematic. It is, after all, tough to describe players
you’ve only just met.
Salladin filled the need for a coach after practice had begun last
season, allowing Joe Havens, the school’s longtime tennis coach who
had volunteered to keep the program from folding until a coach was
found, to put away his volleyball instruction books and merely watch
his daughter Jackie compete.
Salladin, who played at Edison High and Azusa Pacific University,
had just returned from New Jersey, where her husband had been
attending law school, and was hopeful of catching on as a varsity
assistant or, perhaps, a lower-level prep coach.
Instead, she inherited an athletic group of varsity Mustangs with,
most would admit, lower-level volleyball skills.
“Some of the girls had not played volleyball in nine months,”
Salladin recalled of her first workouts. But, even though the
Mustangs struggled through last season, finishing 2-12, 2-8 in the
Pacific Coast League, Salladin was eager to see how an offseason
training regimen could expedite the team’s progress.
“I knew, even last year, I had some amazing athletes, who had been
playing sports (mostly soccer) for a long time,” she said. “I saw a
lot of potential.”
She drilled players in fundamentals in sixth-period workouts last
spring and continued to polish some rough edges in the summer,
anticipating a much friendlier competitive environment with the
school’s shift to the Golden West League.
After Friday’s crucial 6-15, 15-5, 16-14, 15-11 league win over
visiting Ocean View, the Mustangs are 8-2, 7-0 in league. With just
five league matches remaining, they are two matches ahead of the
Seahawks in the league standings and appear poised to claim the
program’s first league title.
Senior middle blocker Sharon Day, the defending CIF State high
jump champion and a decorated soccer standout, has been the team’s
leading weapon.
“If I had to pick out a star, it would be Sharon,” Salladin said.
“She’s such a gifted athlete and she jumps so high, she has the
ability to dominate in the middle. She gets the majority of our kills
every single match.”
The ball control necessary to feature a middle hitter has also
been there and sophomore setters Jenny Sparks and Jackie Havens have
been distributing those quality passes.
Senior middle blocker Kristen Bagwell and senior outside hitter
Devin Denman, both of whom have also been standouts for the soccer
team for years, are joined in the starting lineup by outside hitter
Emily Abbott.
Other than Friday’s thrilling victory, Santa Ana was the only
league opponent to win a game off the Mustangs, who are anxious to
see how they stack up against future Division III-A playoff foes.
“I’m very excited about this team,” said Salladin, a walk-on who
has the same enthusiasm about extending her tenure with the Mustangs.
“I would love to stay at Costa Mesa,” she said. “I love the school
and I love the support from the athletic department. It’s a great
place to coach and I’ve got five returners next year I’m really
excited about.”
*
The Newport Harbor High girls volleyball team, ranked No.1 in CIF
Division II-AA, is hoping to turn things around when it visits Sea
View League rival Aliso Niguel Thursday at 3:15 p.m.
Coach Dan Glenn’s Sailors (15-6, 3-1 in league heading into
Tuesday’s Sea View clash with Foothill) were stunned, 15-4, 15-10,
14-16, 12-15, 12-15, by the Wolverines, Oct. 9 at home.
Glenn, whose squad just dropped 3 of 4 matches at the Santa
Barbara Tournament of Champions, blames himself for the first Aliso
loss. He said, after winning the first two games, he began
experimenting with personnel and “forgot we were playing a match.”
Glenn, an outspoken critic of CIF Southern Section rules that
prohibit schools from “playing up,” in the playoffs against schools
with larger enrollments, was disappointed when the Sailors missed the
Division I enrollment cutoff by 14 students.
That disappointment was mollified by a potential state playoff
showdown against nationally ranked St. Francis High of Mountain View,
which had won four of the last five state Division II titles,
including the last two. But Glenn said St. Francis, unrestricted by
Central Coast Section rules, has elected to “play up” in Division I
this year.
“There’s still plenty of good teams for us to play in this
division,” Glenn said. “We’re good, but we have to be there 100%
mentally every day.”
*
Paul Kirby, who resigned as Estancia High’s girls basketball coach
after last season, has resurfaced as a varisty assistant at Marina.
Kirby, as well as former Estancia junior varsity girls coach Carlito
Butalid with both assist Vikings Coach Butch Fredlow, with whom Kirby
played at Ocean View High.
*
Construction on Beckman High in Tustin has begun and the eighth
member of the Golden West League is scheduled to open in September of
2004, halfway through the current four-year cycle.
Since new schools typically don’t field varsity teams their first
year of existence and seldom have a senior class until their third
year, this means the new school will have virtually no competitive
impact at the varsity level in the Golden West League, before the
releaguing process begins anew.
This is good news for Golden West representatives Costa Mesa and
Estancia, though it could mean Beckman will be rubber-stamped for a
return to the Golden West League.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.