On the move
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Mike Sciacca
They haven’t even run a race or competed in an event, yet the Laguna
Beach High track and field program already has posted a big victory.
In just a year, the program has spiked its numbers, raising the
bar, so to speak, from roughly 40 athletes who came out for the teams
last year, to more than 120, who put on their running shoes this year
for the 2005 season.
“The number of athletes we have attracted is our greatest victory
of the new season,” Laguna Beach coach Dave Brobeck said. “Track is a
sport consisting of 16 very different events. You must have bodies to
fill all the slots to be competitive. This is a tall order for a
small school like ours, particularly when we go against mammoth
programs like Northwood and Tesoro.”
Brobeck said that the rise in numbers can be attributed to a
“variety of factors,” but feels that the new track and turf instilled
at the school is the main draw.
The new field has been enjoyed for game use this school year by
the Breakers football and boys’ and girls’ soccer teams.
The track and field team members also will be wearing new
uniforms.
“I feel that our new world-class facility is likely our greatest
selling point,” Brobeck said. “Kids just want to be on it. This
season has been the target season for the past five years.
“I was purposefully frugal with our money in the past because I
knew that an all-weather facility was coming and that we would need
the financial resources to buy new equipment. I felt like this year I
was on a track spending spree, buying what I coveted most for our
program. Our new maroon and gold uniforms are sharp.”
Brobeck calls the 2005 Breakers’ boys’ team, a real “team of
teams.”
“I never make New Year’s resolutions. I see the sham in it,” he
said. “However, this year I resolved to recruit a kid a day for the
month of January. I sought kids out on campus during break and lunch,
kids I didn’t know personally but heard were good athletes in other
programs.
“Track must be a ‘team of teams,’ in order to experience any
semblance of success. You need every type of athlete the school has.
I am really enjoying working with kids I never had before --
football, volleyball and soccer kids. I think we have some budding
superstars that will emerge and surprise people in league. But at
this time it is still all theoretical. It all looks great on paper.
We’ll see how this assortment of athletes choose to work together.”
Just like the boys’ team, the girls’ squad, Brobeck said, has
potential.
“The girls’ team is big in number, just like the boys, but much
younger,” he said. “The girls have five-to-seven legitimate varsity
competitors at this time, whereas the boys have 20-to-25. Several of
the younger girls have the talent to step into varsity slots later in
the season.”
A reputation for consistent winning has eluded Laguna’s track and
field program, but Brobeck says its time to change that pattern.
His boys’ cross country team won a state championship last fall,
and Earl Towner’s girls’ cross country squad also had a successful
showing at the state meet.
“No one can remember the last time we were successful as a whole
team,” he said. “I just won’t have losing anymore. I have tasted
victory at the highest level in cross country and I am ready for the
boys’ track program to rise up to this higher standard of excellence,
as well.
“I will not promise great things at this point, because there is a
lot that has to happen just right among the guys, but I will say that
we will field competitive, if not league champion-caliber, varsity
competitors in every event. I believe that we will have the
opportunity to hang with the big fish in league.”
Brobeck said that many of Laguna’s top frosh-soph and varsity
athletes will compete Saturday at the program’s first meet of the
season, the Irvine Invitational.
Laguna opens its Pacific Coast League season on March 24 by
hosting Tesoro.
“This will be a big, early season test for us,” he said of the
upcoming Tesoro meet.
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