Gomez adds to her already-impressive resume
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Tony Altobelli
You remember Zoila Gomez, don’t you? The pint-size smile machine
from Columbia who scorched the track and field world, both at Costa Mesa
High and at Orange Coast.
Well, the three-time state champ for the Pirates and two-time OCC
Athlete of the Year has recently become an NCAA Division II champion for
Adams State College in Alamosa, Colo.
The Grizzlies junior captured the 10,000-meter title at the NCAA
Division II National Track & Field Championships, held at the University
of Southern Illinois-Edwardsville.
Gomez’s time of 34:58.20 bettered South Dakota’s Molly Wedel and four
Western State College runners in the process.
On Saturday, Gomez placed fifth in the 5,000 in 17:10.24.
With the win, Gomez captured her second All-American award in just
five months with the Grizzlies. She was an All-American for the cross
country team as well.
So much for that thin air and snow being a problem, huh?
Upon completion of one of the biggest turnarounds of an individual’s
baseball season, Iowa State University’s Joe Urban (Newport Harbor)
finished up his Cyclones’ career with a .354 batting average, 57 hits, 24
runs scored, 29 RBIs, two triples, four home runs and a team-high 15
doubles.
With his white-hot hitting in the second half of the season, Urban was
a second-team, All-Big 12 Conference selection.
Halfway through the season, if you were to tell me Urban was going to
pull off numbers like that, I would thought he’d have a better chance
seeing his name on top of the soon-to-be new Corona del Mar baseball
field with a big statue of him in the parking lot.
“I started slow, but I kept my confidence,” Urban said during a recent
phone conversation. “I didn’t expect it to be as tough as it was. At
Santa Ana College, you get one No. 1 pitcher a week, but at this level,
every pitcher is a No. 1. That makes a big difference.”
Urban ended his Iowa State career by going 1 for 4 with a two-run home
run.
“I knew I had the capability to put up the numbers,” Urban said. “I
really wanted to show the team and the coaches that I could hit and be a
productive part of this offense. This second half of the season was by
far the best streak I’ve ever had. The baseball looked like a beach ball
instead of a golf ball.”
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