Coasters: Titletown
- Share via
Steve Virgen
While one team was about to reach its ninth state title and the
other its first, both Orange Coast College squads reached down deep to
make the stuff of champions last weekend.
At Fresno’s Woodward Park, the OCC women’s cross country team overcame
Mt. San Antonio College, which had tied the Pirates at the Southern
California Championships, to win its ninth state title and its fourth in
five years. And on the men’s side, sophomore Ryan Bosquet won the
individual state title in a tight race.
Led by freshman Michelle Icban and sophomore Lindsay Allen, who
finished second and third, respectively, the Orange Empire Conference
champions, won the state title with 60 points, 12 better than
second-place Mt. SAC.
“That (title) says (the Pirates) had a tremendous amount of character
and showed their will to fight when it counted,” OCC Coach John Goldman
said. “Tying Mt. SAC at (the SoCal championships) was one of the best
things that could happen to us, because it was a wake-up call. That
(state title) says a lot about our character.”
Goldman said every runner’s performance was important Saturday, when
freshman Katie Mais finished 15th in 19:38 and freshman Roseann Peters
was 21st in 20:01. OCC freshman Natalie St. Andre, a Newport Harbor High
product, finished 34th in 20:14, while freshmen Suzette Dinoso (41st) and
Heather Huggins (42nd) completed the course in 20:26.
Bousquet, the sophomore transfer from the University of Arizona, set a
course record (20:05), just two seconds ahead of San Diego Mesa’s Sean
Ricketes.
Bousquet passed four runners with less than a half mile remaining and
left Ricketes in the dust with less than 100 meters to go.
An indication that the men’s race was a fast one: The first four
runners broke the former course record.
The OCC men, OEC champions, finished fifth in state.
Meanwhile, in Merced, the OCC women’s water polo team answered a 2-1
halftime deficit to grab a 6-4 win over Riverside for the Pirates’ first
state title.
OCC faced its toughest competition in a semifinal against the Merced
Blue Devils, who performed pregame rituals, supported by a sellout and
loud cheering section. The Blue Devils nearly knocked out the giant.
The game had all the makings of an upset. The local Merced newspaper
came out with a full spread on its JC team to preview the matchup against
OCC and made it quite clear the Blue Devils, the North’s No. 1 seed, had
a great chance to upset the Pirates.
In addition, the Blue Devils entered the match with their game faces
on. Before pregame introductions, they threw a ball, which had “OCC”
marked on it, into a trash can. Merced players also dipped their swim
caps in a special ball. The ball had “100% commitment” marked on it and
the Blue Devils had cut a hole into the ball for the dipping.
“That was one game we knew it was going to be difficult to play,” OCC
assistant coach Mike Giles said. “They had a loud crowd, because there’s
nothing else to do in Merced on Friday night. The lighting was not too
bright and it was like we were playing in the dark.”
But the OEC champions did not back down. OCC battled back from a 3-1
deficit before halftime.
Devon Wright and Erica Nicholson were in danger of disqualification as
each picked up a pair of ejections in the first quarter. One more kickout
for either would have been an automatic disqualification for the rest of
the game.
Wright ended up scoring twice and recording three steals. Neisha
Hoagland snagged five steals.
“This team doesn’t roll over,” Giles said. “The girls have always had
confidence. In the second half, when it counted, they came back. We just
had too many weapons. This team was a phenomenal team. It could be one of
the best all-time water polo teams in regard to getting players in legal
recruiting areas.”
The Pirates’ first state title featured a 35-0 record against
community college teams. Its only blemish was a loss to UC Irvine, NCAA
Division I team.
Wright, Hoagland and goalie Heather Deyden, another Newport Harbor
product were among eight players named all-state.
Wright and Hoagland were Co-MVPs of the OEC and Southern California
Regional Championships.
Ricky Tovar recorded one sack and 20 tackles against Saddleback, not
for the season as previously reported. This season, Tovar filled in
admirably at middle linebacker because of injuries to Marvin Simmons and
Travis Loidolt.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.