Contant the man
- Share via
Steve Virgen
The pressure mounted on Blake Contant’s shoulders, but the Corona del
Mar High senior would not break down.
This was his moment. This was what he wanted: the ball in his hand
in the Sea Kings’ most important game of the season. His adrenaline
seemingly increased as he warmed up in the bullpen at Dodger Stadium
before Corona del Mar took on Tesoro in the CIF Southern Section
Division IV championship Saturday morning.
The Titans entered the contest with great confidence, having
knocked out top-seeded La Quinta, 4-1, Tuesday. They wanted to add
Contant to their upset list. Tesoro scored one run on two hits in the
top of the first and Contant could have crumbled.
But the Sea Kings’ team captain and left-handed ace relied on the
stuff he has used all year. The stuff didn’t have so much to do with
pitching, but rather with calmness and an unwavering aggressive
attitude that appeared to be too much for the Titans.
Contant quickly rebounded from allowing the run that came from Nik
Nelson’s RBI single in the first. Contant struck out the next batter.
Including that strikeout, he retired 19 of the next 21, leading the
Sea Kings to the CIF Division IV championship with a 3-1 victory over
Tesoro.
Contant closed out his high school career with a three-hitter that
included three strikeouts and no walks on 75 pitches.
In the Sea Kings’ playoff run, Contant earned four wins and one
save. He finished the season with a 1.76 ERA.
“I couldn’t ask for anything better than this,” said Contant, a
front-runner for the CIF Division IV Player of the Year award. “To
finish 25-5 as a team and with a 12-2 [pitching] record, I’m
breathless. It’s awesome.”
Contant used a curveball and an effective changeup to keep the
Titans off balance. He retired the side in order in the second,
third, fifth and sixth innings.
“Blake Contant made the difference in the game,” Tesoro Coach Rick
Brail said. “He pitched a great game.”
After the Sea Kings scored two runs in the fourth to grab a 3-1
lead, the CdM senior hurler seemed even more relaxed. That meant
trouble for the Titans.
“[Friday] night, I went over to his house and he looked so
prepared and so focused,” said Dan Marin-Finn, the CdM catcher. “Even
when he came to the ballpark, he was so even keel. He was ready to
go. That pumped me up. He gives off a great vibe to everyone else and
everyone feeds off of it.”
Marin-Finn was also Contant’s battery mate when they were 11 and
playing in Little League. When Contant allowed the first-inning run,
Marin-Finn was not worried about it.
“I’ve been catching him since we were kids,” Marin-Finn said. “I
know he’s a fighter and he can battle back. Sure enough, he did.”
Said CdM Coach John Emme: “There was nothing different about him
[Saturday]. That’s what I love about him. It’s really funny. I was
very nervous Tuesday [against Northwood]. I was not nervous in the
least [Saturday]. That’s no disrespect to Tesoro. They are a great
team, but having Blake on the hill gives me a great sense of calm.”
Contant credits his coolness and confidence to his work ethic.
Since the summer before his junior year, Contant has religiously been
working out, and maintaining a healthy diet that included a great
deal of chicken, his mother, Lori, said.
“He was very calm, cool and collected [Saturday] morning,” Lori
said. “He has always been like that. He’s a quiet leader, like my
father [Earl Reynolds].”
Contant plans to continue his hard work as a preferred walk-on at
the University of Arizona. That’s quite a journey, considering where
he came from before high school.
Aaron Kokx, a Tesoro assistant who coached under Emme at CdM in
1999, remembered Contant then, and appreciated him now.
“I remember when he was an eighth-grader at our summer camp,” Kokx
said. “He was about 5-foot-4 and couldn’t throw hard enough to break
a pane of glass. For him to be pitching at Dodger Stadium is awesome.
He’s the kind of kid who shows you how you can grow and develop
through four years of high school.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.