Prep column: A break in the routine
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Barry Faulkner
Sunshine, sunflower seeds and a scorecard are just some of the
ingredients which make spring break baseball an annual highlight of the
prep sports beat.
But after catching drizzle for six innings of Costa Mesa High’s 10-0
mercy-rule defeat at the hands of visiting A.B. Miller Monday, I began to
think otherwise.
The skies cleared Tuesday afternoon, however, and the infectious
enthusiasm spilling from the Costa Mesa dugout helped remind me how much
joy this pastoral pastime could provide.
Costa Mesa junior Carlos Franco displayed his ample passion for the game
by dragging the infield, moments before climbing the mound to author a
complete-game five-hitter in the Mustangs’ 8-2 win over Orange.
Franco, whose barely-below-the-knee pinstripe pants and roundish physique
stir nostalgic images of Babe Ruth waddling his way to baseball
immortality, was completely in his element.
A diamond rat, who prompted a teammate to hit him ground balls at third,
as others raked the infield following a 10-0 loss to University last
week, Franco savored every pitch of his second start of the season.
When a sharp comebacker ricocheted off his right ankle, directly to the
third baseman who threw the runner out at first to end Orange’s third
inning, Franco bounded to the dugout, obeying diamond dogma by refusing
to rub the wound.
He later admitted the blow was painful, but not until gleefully
professing his pride in recording an assist on the play.
Franco, whose base-running zeal sometimes supersedes his sundial speed,
was extremely out at home in the fifth, when the Orange catcher retrieved
a wild pitched that had bounced a few feet away, scrambled back to his
position, then awaited Franco’s presence for the tag. The certainty of
the putout forced Franco to abort his trademark headfirst slide, which
displaces dirt similar to the splash of a cannonball dive into the deep
end.
Franco drove in two insurance runs with a bloop single in the sixth,
rumbled to second on the ensuing throw to third base, then smiled all the
way to the dugout when replaced by a pinch-runner.
Franco’s teammates thoroughly enhanced the entertainment factor.
Senior Galel Fajardo, a particularly audible member of the Mustangs’
dugout chatter brigade, unleashed this gem after teammate Nick Cabico’s
attempt to bunt for a base hit rolled foul: “I can smell you working up
there, Nicky.”
Cabico, nicknamed “Splinter” also prompted the following anonymous
offering after lining a single to center field: “Nice rope, Splinter.”
q
Corona del Mar’s Pride of the Coast Tournament contest Wednesday against
visiting San Clemente was another afternoon well spent.
This time, however, some CdM parents provided the humorous anecdotes
during the 5-4 CdM loss.
When the home-plate umpire called timeout just before a pitch to shoo
away a bug which had apparently flown into his mask, one CdM parent asked
another about the delay.
Without hesitation, another parent jokingly replied: “His artificial eye
fell out.”
q
The Pride of the Coast Tournament, which has failed to attract 16 teams
in recent years, leading to some creative scheduling, will once again be
a 16-team event next season, CdM Coach John Emme said.
Emme, who will replace CdM Athletic Director Jerry Jelnick as tournament
director, said he and CdM assistant Aaron Kokx will work hard to return
the tournament to the prestige it once held.
q
Hopefully a 16-team field in 2001 will include Estancia, rounding out the
unanimous Newport-Mesa District participation which has annually added to
the Pride of the Coast experience.
The Eagles opted for a nonleague doubleheader today (hosting Rancho
Alamitos at 11 a.m.) as their only Easter break action this season.
q
The Costa Mesa High boys volleyball team, which dominated the competition
to win the 16-team Mayfair Tournament Saturday, is a prime example of a
team which could benefit from the Sweet 16 major-division CIF
championship tournament proposed by Newport Harbor Coach Dan Glenn.
Such an event would draw the top teams from lower divisions, such as
Corona del Mar in Division III, leaving teams like Costa Mesa a better
chance to contend for a Southern Section championship.
This year’s squad has fared well against foes other than CdM and Laguna
Beach and would all but lock up a guaranteed playoff berth with a second
league victory over University Wednesday (at Uni).
The 1998 Mustangs, the school’s best team since the early 1980s, were
eliminated in the CIF Division III quarterfinals by CdM. But with CdM
playing in Division I (which would not be possible next season, unless
Glenn’s reforms gain favor), Mesa could make some postseason noise this
spring in Division III.
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