Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week - Paige Janes: Zero tolerance
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Barry Faulkner
When Paige Janes receives her defensive assignment before every
Corona del Mar High girls soccer game, it’s as if she is given a new goal
in life.
And, as those unfortunate enough to have been marked by the sophomore
fullback can attest, the mere hint of any other goal, especially the kind
that pass under the crossbar and between the posts, will simply not be
tolerated.
“I can’t remember the last time a girl I’ve gone against scored,” said
Janes, who, realizing the temerity of such a statement, almost wishes she
could.
“I usually put her on the other team’s strongest player and she has
shut them all down,” said CdM Coach Ron Evans, who is, himself, a
frequent victim of similar treatment at Sea Kings practices.
“She’s tenacious and works very hard,” Evans continued. “She is great
in the air and can be physical, yet she can be technically superior, as
well.”
So thorough is Janes’ level of domination, even against the most
gifted scorers her peer group can produce, her criteria for success does
not begin and end with a shutout.
Zero tolerance is an insufficient phrase to describe her objectives.
She aspires, in fact, to allow her rival less than zero.
“I’m really self-motivated and I’m very hard on myself,” the Daily
Pilot Athlete of the Week explained. “Even if my girl does not score, I
can usually find something to make me wish I had a better game.”
A relentless competitor, Janes doesn’t let a big lead, which the Sea
Kings (26-2-3) had plenty of this season, distract her from her task.
“I totally feed off competition,” she said. “It doesn’t matter how
good the other team is, I’m focusing on my assignment and I’m competing
with myself. I want to look my best and rise to the occasion. That
challenge really brings out the spark in me. I have to be smarter and
quicker than the girl I’m playing against. I always want to outshine
her.”
In the process of eclipsing the talents of her foes, Janes said she is
not afraid to incur a little punishment.
“I definitely take an elbow here and there and I usually get a few new
bruises every game,” she said. “The girls I play against are used to
having the advantage. When that doesn’t happen, they can get a little
frustrated.
“But if they start bumping on me, I bump on them, too. I try to give
them the message I’m not going to put up with that stuff.”
Intimidation has become another of Janes’ skills.
“If you can be physical with them early in the game, sometimes they
back off a little,” Janes said. “I might even push a girl around a little
when the referee isn’t looking.”
With Janes on the back line -- along with senior sweeper Molly O’Meara
and seniors Margit Vogele and Natalia Dorfman -- and senior Britta Vogele
manning the goal, CdM posted 15 shutouts this season. CdM’s first three
playoff opponents failed to score, including a 7-0 win over Martin Luther
King (Feb. 20) and a 3-0 quarterfinal triumph over Valley Christian (Feb.
22).
And while the season ended in a 2-1 sudden-death overtime defeat
against Harvard-Westlake in the CIF Southern Section Division IV
semifinals Tuesday, Janes has already begun looking forward to next
season.
She is, in fact, in line for a promotion.
“There’s a good chance she’ll end up sweeping for us next year,” Evans
said.
Janes said she will be happy to play wherever her team needs her most,
but she will miss the constant challenge of marking one player, should
she move to sweeper.
“I prefer fullback, because there’s more action,” said Janes, a
veteran club player who helped the Newport Beach-based Slammers win the
under-15 State Cup last year.
Janes said Tuesday’s loss was a devastating end to a joyful season, in
which she made lasting friendships, particularly with the seniors.
“What hurts most is that I won’t be able to play any more with the
people on my team I love so much,” she said. “This year’s seniors have
been awesome.”
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