Boys basketball: Sailors know the way to Santa Fe
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Tony Altobelli
NEWPORT BEACH - Aaron Yarnal did the pretty work, while Nadim
Pajevic and Tony Melum pounded out the dirty work. Between the threesome,
the Newport Harbor High boys basketball team found a way to win despite a
couple of obstacles.
A teamwide flu bug combined with a gritty Santa Fe squad gave Newport
fits, but in the end, the host Sailors pulled out a 55-50 win in the
first round of the CIF Southern Section Division I-A playoffs Friday
night.
“We had tape on these guys, but I don’t think we completely realized
how quick they really were,” a relieved Newport Coach Larry Hirst said
afterward. “They were very well-coached and well disciplined. That’s all
we’re going to see during the playoffs. Every level will get tougher and
tougher, so we better be ready for it.”
Yarnal, one of various Sailor players slowed with a virus that has
been passed from player to player over the past couple of weeks, led the
Sailors (20-6) with 22 points, while Pajevic and Melum (10 points) each
pulled down 14 big rebounds.
“People might see Aaron’s 22 points and give him all the credit, but
Tony and Nadim were huge for us down low, especially Nadim,” Hirst said.
“He really lit a spark for us with his effort and hustle.”
With the win, the Sailors will play against Pacific High of San
Bernardino on Tuesday, beginning at 7:30 p.m. A coin flip will decide the
site. Pacific defeated Poly of Riverside, 65-64.
The Sailors used massive and rapid substitutions throughout the game
to keep gas in the players’ tanks. “At certain points, our energy level
was down from the bug, but we weren’t going to use that as a reason not
to compete, Hirst said.”
Mike Garcia had 17 points to lead the Chiefs (15-10), while Victor
Castaneda chipped in with 13, including three three-pointers.
Newport led for most of the first half, though Santa Fe kept the game
close throughout, never trailing by more than five. Yarnal scored eight
of Newport’s 13 first-quarter points, while seven different Sailors
scored in the second quarter, giving the hosts a 29-24 halftime lead.
Newport opened the third quarter with a 7-3 run to push the lead to
nine before the Chiefs closed out the quarter with a 10-4 run and cut the
lead to 40-37. Duke Rivera scored five of his seven points in that
quarter.
The Sailors led by four with 3:25 remaining in the game when Santa Fe
got two successful free throws by Garcia and a three-pointer from John
Temidara to give the Chiefs a 50-49 lead with 2:33 left, sending the
well-attended Santa Fe faithful into a frenzy.
Was Hirst concerned at that point? “I was concerned right from the
opening tip,” he confessed. “That’s a very solid team over there. They
battled right down to the end.”
That’s when Yarnal went to work. The senior guard hit a jumper with
1:20 left to give the lead back to Newport. Following a missed shot by
Santa Fe, Yarnal, with the shot clock nearing zero, hit a leaping,
leaning, 10-footer with 30 seconds remaining for a 53-50 Newport
advantage.
“Yarnal was probably the sickest of them all during the week,” Hirst
said. “He really picked up the offensive slack for us and did a great job
on both ends of the floor. That’s what a senior leader is supposed to
do.”
Santa Fe missed again on its next trip down the floor and was forced
to foul Melum, who calmly made both free throws with nine seconds left to
ice the game.”
Following the game, Hirst made one request in terms of his next
opponents. “No more quick teams, no more quick teams,” he said with a
laugh.
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