Coasters: State runner-up OCC has daunting final task
Steve Virgen
Even though the season is over for the Orange Coast College men’s
volleyball team, the Pirates are left with yet another challenge. They
have to decide who is the team’s Most Valuable Player.
Sure the Bucs lost in the state final Saturday, but this is, as Coach
Chuck Cutenese would say, one of the most talented teams he’s had in his
nine years.
Cutenese, like always, will ask his players to vote on the MVP. And it
will be plenty hard to find just one person who fits that label. Is there
a quad-MVP?
Even I’m undecided when it comes to naming the team’s MVP. Not that my
vote counts anyway, but in my book the Pirates’ MVP is ... wow, this is
very difficult.
At the California Community College Championships, sophomore libero Ed
Chun battled through pain in his right knee after he collided with
another player during Game 3 of the state final match against L.A.
Pierce. He has been the spark plug of the team and you can’t say enough
about the electricity he brings to the Pirates. He amassed a school
single-season record 235 digs. When he earns his Associate of Arts degree
after the fall semester, he said the University of Hawaii could give him
a partial scholarship. If that happens, he’ll return to his native state.
But then there’s B.J. Lightvoet, the sophomore outside hitter who went
the distance against Pierce, despite pain in his right (hitting) hand.
He’s an MVP, too. He has been experiencing a pinched nerve in his right
shoulder which has been cutting off circulation to his wrist and hand.
Lightvoet, the Coast Mesa High product who led the team in kills this
season, practiced only one day the week the Bucs prepared for the state
playoffs. He earned a spot on the state all-tournament team after
finishing with a team-high 12 kills assists in the three-game win over El
Camino in the semifinals. And in the finals, he led the team again with
18 kills.
His confident, upbeat personality was a big reason the Pirates won the
Orange Empire Conference and nearly brought home an unprecedented sixth
state title.
So he should be the MVP, right?
But, what about setter Nick Ptaschinski, who overwhelmingly fulfilled
the leadership role? He too, received all-tournament honors after he
finished with 55 assists against Pierce and 35 against El Camino.
There’s also Soeren Schneider, a freshman from Germany. The 6-foot-6,
240-pound outside hitter assuredly imposed intimidation on opponents. He
finished second on the team in kills.
Don’t forget Jeff Taylor, the Daily Pilot of Athlete of the Month.
I give up.
There are many moments to remember for the Pirates men’s volleyball
team this season, but the last memory it is left with is the Brahmas
hoisting the championship trophy. When tournament officials named
Pierce’s Dhiraj Coats MVP, the Pirates displayed dejection. Chun wore a
towel over his head and only Cutenese and Taylor applauded, using a golf
clap to pay their respects.
For Morgan Jackson, a Corona del Mar High product, the scene just made
him want to come back with more energy next year.
“We will be here next year,” he said. “Guaranteed.”
The Pirates received a strong performance off the bench from Jackson
against Pierce. The reserve middle blocker did not play in Friday’s
semifinal or in Game 1 of the finals. But he came up with four kills and
six blocks.
The loss also made Cutenese eager for next year.
“I would love to play this team again,” he said of the Brahmas. “I’m
not afraid of this team. They’ve ended up on the winning end twice (this
season), but it’s a crapshoot when the two of us meet.”
Though the Pirates lost in a thrilling fourth game that ended the
match, Cutenese was more than satisfied with the season. He also took
pleasure when his team answered back after being down 2-0 in games.
“This loss doesn’t take away from the season we had,” he said. “Our
whole focus is to develop people individually and make them better
athletes and I think we are doing that. My goal is to make sure that my
sophomores will find a place to play and we’ve done that.”
“(The state championship) is a goal that was set at the beginning of
the year,” he continued. “We didn’t meet that goal and that’s what life
is about. You’re not going to meet every goal that you have, but you work
to achieve that goal. When you don’t achieve it, you learn something from
it. And I hope they learn something from this.”
The men’s track and field team won its second straight Orange Empire
Conference crown Saturday. The victory, combined with the new facilities
at Coast, should give the Pirates a leg up on the competition when it
comes to recruiting. But, then again, Golden West managed to recruit two
OCC students, Greg Stewart and Logan Odden, this season.
In other OCC track news: sophomore Steven Taeleman and freshman Julie
Kroening, a Costa Mesa High product, have qualified for the State
Championships May 17-19. Taeleman will compete in the decathlon and
Kroening the heptathlon
In men’s basketball news, Nick Burwell has declared himself eligible
for the NBA draft. Talk about against all odds. Who’s going to draft a
player who was on a juco team that tanked after a 5-0 start in
conference?
Good luck.
Burwell, a 6-foot-3, 215-pound guard, averaged 22.7 points a game last
season, the third-highest average in school history. He’s been told he
would get drafted and entered the draft after receiving advice from his
agent.
In closing, I will admit I was wrong in predicting the Pirates
volleyball team would win the state championship. I underestimated
Pierce. The Brahmas are the better team, but a strong case can be made
that the Pirates have better players.
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