Prep column: Injustice is served
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Barry Faulkner
Corona del Mar High girls tennis knows how the late Wilt
Chamberlain felt when he suggested nobody roots for Goliath.
But the slingshots wielded against one of Coach Andy Stewart’s top
players last week -- in the form of a 4-1 vote to deny reigning CIF
Southern Section singles champion Brittany Reitz a chance to compete in
the league and, consequently, CIF individual tournament -- should be
confiscated, so as not to ever again harm another hardcourt heavyweight.
To be fair, PCL coaches from Laguna Beach, Northwood, University and
Estancia (Costa Mesa’s coach did not attend the meeting) had a league
rule on their side.
But the requirement that all players play at least seven league team
matches to qualify for the league individual tournament, is as petty as
those who lobbied for its installment, then used its enforcement to veil
selfish interests.
Resentment from league coaches over CdM’s dominance since joining the
PCL -- the “Empresses on Eastbluff” are 30-0, have won all three league
titles and swept all but one league singles and doubles crown after
coming over from the Sea View League -- led to the rule, aimed at elite
Sea King players.
These supremely talented athletes, many of whom occupy lofty spots in
the SCTA junior rankings and earn college scholarships, elect to
contribute to their high school programs, though doing so often conflicts
with the betterment of their game.
Consequently, some players prefer quality instruction, usually
administered by professional coaches at several local clubs, to trouncing
inadequate competition which, let’s be frank, the current PCL
configuration provides plenty of.
Stewart recalled one singles massacre, in which a CdM player won every
point against an overmatched foe, lasted a mere eight minutes. Another
coach related instances of humiliation in which boys singles standouts
have toyed with less talented rivals by beating them with their opposite
hand.
Coaches should be finding ways to prevent such assaults on a
racquet-wielding victim’s self-esteem, rather than legislating their
proliferation.
The same high-profile players frequently put personal interests aside
to help their teams combat top rivals. Many savor the camaraderie they
experience in a team format and most earn praise from their coaches for
the positive impact they have on teammates. Their participation, however
sporadic, should be encouraged and applauded, not penalized.
Further, as in other sports such as golf and, to some extent, cross
country and track and field, the team and individual portions of the
postseason are primarily separate ventures.
Once the PCL regular season concludes, the league’s top three teams
proceed to the team playoffs in whatever enrollment divisions those
schools fit.
The league then holds an individual tennis tournament, which should be
about determining the league’s best representatives for the individual
section tournament. The league singles and doubles finalists get the
chance to pursue Southern Section spoils.
No other sport in the PCL quantifies team participation requirements
for entry into their postseason championships. Not cross country, track
and field, swimming, wrestling, nor golf.
The tennis coaches’ rule originally called for a minimum of five
league matches, including at least one each against all league rivals.
This is at least defensible, in that a school could not load up against
certain league rivals, then field a diluted lineup against others,
potentially skewing the team standings.
However, this argument loses credibility when used against CdM, which
is so far superior to the rest of the league, it has and probably will
continue to sweep past opponents despite the absence of a handful of
heavy hitters.
After some investigation, I believe the real inspiration for the rule
is to blackball part-time participants, in order to increase the
likelihood that lesser players from other schools will qualify for the
CIF individual tournament.
And while some coaches may argue they are merely promoting the best
interests of their own players, I contend they are compromising the
interests of the league as a whole, not to mention the ideals of
competition, by not advancing the most worthy competitors to the CIF
stage.
In Reitz’s particular case, she had already publicized her desire to
play doubles this postseason, relinquishing the opportunity to defend her
CIF singles crown. But she should have been allowed to compete in
doubles.
To her credit, Reitz harbors no ill feelings over the coaches who
ended her individual season. She said she is happy to have won one CIF
individual title, happy to have contributed to her team’s unbeaten
record, and she looks forward to potentially helping top-seeded CdM earn
its second straight CIF Division IV team title.
In taking such a stance, Reitz displays the type of class those PCL
coaches who voted against her can only aspire to.
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