Girls swimming: Tars win on reversal
Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - Even Newport Harbor High girls swimming coach Ken
LaMont didn’t know how prophetic he was when he said there were a couple
races that could have gone either way in the Sailors’ Sea View League
meet against visiting Laguna Hills Monday.
LaMont’s comments came about 10 minutes after the final event, after
which the computer scoring system, and both coaches, had Laguna Hills,
ranked No. 6 in Orange County, upsetting the No. 3-ranked Tars, 87-83.
Both coaches spoke with reporters in attendance, LaMont expressing his
disappointment and Laguna Hills’ Carrie Pardoe her satisfaction.
But, at some point after reporters had left the scene, the score was
reversed, after a review of the computer results, giving Newport Harbor
the victory.
LaMont was unavailable to discuss the scoring change, but the reversal
of an 87-83 loss into an 87-83 victory was apparently made official
before the Laguna Hills bus left the Sailors’ campus.
LaMont said he expected the Sailors to come out on top and, before the
reversal, said his athletes would share the disappointment. He also said
he would use the defeat to “get them going,” as they approach league
preliminaries and finals next week.
LaMont said Monday’s meet, coming on the first day after a week off
for spring recess, was somewhat hard to gauge, because not all his
swimmers attended workouts last week.
But he said he used his “A lineup” against the Hawks, who may now find
some unexpected motivation for the postseason.
The Sailors, who host Aliso Niguel Wednesday to complete the league
dual-meet season, improved to 6-1, 2-1 in league.
Laguna Hills fell to 1-2 in league, having lost previously to league
leading Irvine.
Whatever computer machinations allowed the Sailors to claim victory,
those most responsible were trusted standouts Carly Geehr, Nicole Mackey,
Hayley Peirsol, Mai Tajima and Jennifer Arrow.
Geehr, a junior and the defending league champion in the 200-yard
freestyle and the 100 backstroke, won the former in a season-best
1:51.55. She also won the 100 breaststroke (1:06.97) and anchored the
victorious 200 medley and 400 free relays. As it turns out, her
come-from-behind anchor leg on the 400 free relay, helped the Sailors
hold off the Hawks.
Mackey, a sophomore and the defending league champion in the 200
individual medley and the 100 butterfly, won both events. Her time in the
fly (56.65) was a season-best and she also chipped in on both winning
relays. Mackey inherited more than a body length deficit on the third leg
of the 400 free relay and sliced the margin to mere inches, before Geehr
made up the difference and touched first.
Peirsol, another sophomore and the reigning Sea View 500 free
champion, won her featured event in a season-best 5:07 flat. She swam
backstroke on the medley relay and led off the 400 relay victory.
Tajima was second in the 100 backstroke and the 100 freestyle, the
latter a quality time of 55.86, to earn praise from LaMont. Tajima was
also on the winning free relay.
Arrow, a senior, clocked a season-best 1:04.87 to finish second in the
100 breaststroke, and swam the breaststroke leg of the medley relay.
The Sailors overcame a disappointing second-place finish in the 200
free relay, when a slip at the start put the Tars behind by almost a body
length and they could not make it up. Laguna Hills touched out in
1:46.39, just ahead of Harbor’s 1:46.90 in that event, one LaMont cited
as critical, when he thought the Hawks had won the meet.
Newport sophomore Jenna Murphy added a second-place finish in the 50
free to round out the Sailors’ top-three finishers.
Laguna Hills was paced by winners Amanda Luciano (both freestyle
sprints) and Lindsey Buck (100 backstroke).
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