Pirates pooling talents
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Like coming home to find a candlelit dinner already prepared, the
plates filled with food on an immaculate tablecloth, so is the story
of this season’s Orange Coast College men’s swim team.
“A pleasant surprise,” David Salo said.
Salo and Don Watson co-coach both the men’s and women’s teams at
Coast and have reason to be excited as the two teams leave today for
the state championships, which begin Thursday and continue through
Saturday on the campus of Diablo Valley in Pleasant Hill.
This season has been extremely successful on both fronts. The
women’s team dominated its Orange Empire Conference competition at
the conference championships, completed Saturday, while the men
finished second to Palomar.
An undefeated record along with an OEC championship are some of
the benchmarks reached by a talented OCC’s women’s team, thus far, as
it looks to win its first state title since 1997.
Freshman Sherry Tsai, a member of China’s national team who came
to the United States to train and decided to attend school at Coast
soon after, has taken the community college world by storm. She
seemingly sets records every time she competes.
Tsai, OEC Co-Female Swimmer of the Year -- with freshman teammate
Kimberlee Frith -- set three conference records at the three-day OEC
championships. Frith won the 100-yard freestyle in 52.78.
“Any time you pick up an athlete like that, it makes an immediate
impact,” Salo said of Tsai. “She is so versatile and kind of the
anchor to our program.
“We have a good group of kids, a lot of freshmen. That should make
us strong for the next few years. Other athletes in the area are
looking to be part of the success of this past year. We’ve gotten
back to what Watson has developed in the last 20 years.”
OCC women’s swim teams have won 12 state titles, the first coming
in 1984. Seven came during the 1990s. Watson coached from 1981-98
before returning this year after going on sabbatical.
Salo -- an assistant on the U.S. national team which will compete
in the World Championships in Barcelona, Spain in July -- joined
Watson as OEC Co-Coaches of the Year following the women’s 752-point
outburst at the OEC championships -- 227 more than second-place
Riverside.
Defending state champion Diablo Valley should provide the OCC
women with their toughest competition at the state meet, Salo said.
The nucleus, though, is there for Coast to dethrone the defending
champs.
“We have a team that will hopefully dominate for awhile,” Salo
said.
“The [men] have exceeded all expectations throughout the season.
The guys are in a good position to be in the top five in state as
long as Don and I do our jobs.”
Salo, the Irvine Novaquatics club swim coach in his third year
with the Pirates, acknowledges the men don’t have a lot of depth. But
they have received strong performances from whomever has been in the
pool.
“Tyson Beamer has done a nice job and Billy Jolly has done
everything I’ve asked of him,” Salo said. “Roger Wong has been one of
the most important legs on our medley relay team and Matt Henry, in
the [200] butterfly, has stepped up from last year.”
Salo approached Jolly, a member of Coast’s water polo team that
finished fourth in the OEC in the fall -- during water polo workouts
one morning and asked if he would like to swim in the spring.
“He has got good leadership qualities,” Salo said.
Jolly and Beamer swam with Billy Swanson and Paul Frankenberger on
the 400 free relay team that won the conference crown in 3:10.61.
Newport Harbor High product Mitch Probert was swimming the
breaststroke earlier in the season, but Salo and Watson put him in
more distance events as the year progressed. The result has been
successful.
Probert qualified for the state championships in the 500 and 1,650
free. The sophomore finished fifth in the 1,650 free (17:41.02) at
the OEC championships.
“It was a big shift in what we were focusing on with Mitch,” Salo
said. “He might not have made the state meet if he swam the
breaststroke.”
*
Sophomore Erica Nicholson, a first-team all-conference and
All-Southern California selection in water polo, will continue her
playing career at UC Irvine next season, according to Mike Giles,
OCC’s women’s water polo coach and swimming assistant. Nicholson
amassed 43 goals, 10 assists and 35 steals as Coast (29-9) finished
fifth in the state last season.
The sophomore was a two-year starter, including an undefeated 2001
season (35-0) that resulted in the program’s first state
championship.
She finished seventh in the 100 free (56.06) at the OEC swim
championships last weekend.
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