Coasters column: Bond’s luxury: Lauren Cassity
Steve Virgen
Barbara Bond is fortunate Lauren Cassity rekindled her love with
soccer. Sure, Jaycee Mahler is the scoring phenom for the Orange Coast
College women’s soccer team, but it’s also players like Cassity who
define the team’s success.
Cassity, an Estancia High product and multi-sport athlete, might have
never become one of Bond’s girls this season if it weren’t for her
renewed love for the game.
The 5-foot-8 forward, who has played volleyball, basketball and now
soccer at Coast, is a throwback like no other. She’s old school. While
most athletes focus on one sport, she makes like Babe Didrikson Zaharias
and goes for them all.
She displayed her various talents while at Estancia. And she passed up
a chance to attend San Diego State because she saw her opportunities to
play sports slipping away. After all, she had never focused on just one
sport. She was too busy having fun with each game, meet and match.
“I have no doubt that if I concentrated on one sport I would have gone
to a university (on scholarship),” Cassity says.
As an Eagle, she starred in volleyball and basketball. In hoops, she
earned Pacific Coast League co-Player of the Year in 1999 and she was a
two-time All-Newport-Mesa District as a forward.
And in the spring she got even more creative. At home swimming meets,
she went from strokes in the water to swings at the plate. She was on
Estancia’s swimming team and served double duty with a spot on the
softball squad.
“It was pretty crazy,” says Cassity, an art major. “On the days there
would be home swim meets and softball games, I would run out to the field
with my hair wet. I don’t know how it happened, but it made it very
exciting.”
So there’s no wonder she is helping the Pirates’ soccer team in so
many ways this season. She recorded her first multiple-goal game of the
season, when she scored two goals to lead the Pirates to a 5-1 victory
over Riverside Friday. And Tuesday against Golden West she duplicated her
efforts and scored another two goals to help in an 8-1 victory.
“She’s very versatile,” OCC Coach Barbara Bond said. “We can put her
in as a striker. She can play defense and sweeper. Her versatility has
helped us. She’s a strong gal. And to add to her strength, she has some
speed.”
As OCC prepares for the postseason, Cassity is third on the team with
goals (nine) and second in assists (nine). But it’s not about the
statistics when it comes to Cassity. You would have to watch her to know,
but at times she is the difference-maker.
She’s a big reason Coast is 18-4-1 overall, 14-2 in Orange Empire
Conference play. The only other time the Pirates have won at least 17
games in a season was in 1988, when the team advanced to the state
championship game.
“I couldn’t have asked for a better season,” she says. “I don’t want
it to end. It seems like everyday is a Friday. The playoffs are coming.
It’s just going by very fast. I’m trying to enjoy it as much as I can.”
When the soccer season ends, as if on cue, Cassity will continue to
play sports in the spring. She’s wavering between softball and badminton,
but is leaning more toward the bird and racquet.
“I can’t remember a time in my life I haven’t been involved in
athletics,” says Cassity, who coached junior varsity girls volleyball at
Estancia this season. “It keeps me sane. I just want to stay active. I
never wanted to be bored.”
As the OCC women’s water polo team gears up for the Southern
California Regional Playoffs, its strategy, as cliche as it may sound,
remains. The Pirates are taking one game at a time. It’s the reason they
are the top-ranked team in the state and have the majority of community
college coaches saying OCC will win the state crown this year.
However, the Pirates, the Orange Empire Conference champions who have
held their No. 1 ranking for the entire season, are not paying attention
to the critics. There is still much work to be done. And first things
first, the Southern California Regionals. After a bye, OCC, the No. 1
seed, will await the winner of the Cuesta-Fullerton (two teams the
Pirates have beaten soundly this year) matchup and play today at Cypress
College.
Another reason OCC (30-1) is undefeated this year against community
college teams and one Division I team is because of the friendships on
the team. The camaraderie shared on the team is genuine and it starts
from the top. Coach Don Watson and assistant Mike Giles have a superb
working relationship, which influences the players.
Another team that keeps plugging away is Coach Chuck Cutenese’s
women’s volleyball squad. Talk about living up to expectations. Cutenese
knew he had something special in this team before the season started and
his girls aren’t letting him down.
And they’re not done. The Pirates have yet to clinch the conference
title, even though they are undefeated at 17-0, 11-0 in the OEC.
Sophomore transfer Katja Muller has led OCC in kills in 13 non-tournament
matches, while freshman Krystle Davis has been contributing as well in
the kills department.
Muller leads the team with 271 kills thus far, and Davis has amassed
156. In addition, setter Amber McCarthy and middle blocker Daylyn Kelley,
a Costa Mesa High product, have been just as talented on the team packed
with stars.
Kelley is the only returning sophomore on the squad, which means
expect similar efforts next year when the Pirates will be led by Davis.
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