Prep baseball: CdM draws No. 3-seeded St. Paul
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Barry Faulkner
On the heels of four straight postseason appearances in his first
four years at the helm, Corona del Mar High Coach John Emme said before
this season he’d be a fool if he didn’t list making the CIF Southern
Section Division IV baseball playoffs as one of the Sea Kings’ goals.
Emme and his players have since made fools of those who counted the
Sea Kings out, particularly after they opened the Pacific Coast League
season 0-3 and later found themselves 2-5.
CdM won five of its final eight PCL contests, including a two-game
sweep of Laguna Beach last week, to tie Laguna Beach and Costa Mesa for
third. The defending PCL champions gained the league’s third guaranteed
playoff spot by virtue of a better combined record against Mesa and
Laguna.
The Sea Kings (12-13) will hope to extend their rise from the ashes
Friday, when they visit No. 3-seeded St. Paul (21-7)
for a first-round clash at 3:15 p.m.
Costa Mesa (13-13) was not awarded one of three at-large berths in
Division IV when the pairings were announced at the section office
Monday.
The Sea Kings, CIF Division IV champions in 1999, lost in the first
round last season, a 4-3 heartbreaker against Ocean View that went 12
innings.
Including a second-round loss in 2000, Emme’s charges are 1-2 in the
postseason, since running the table to capture the program’s second
section title in ’99.
The Sea Kings carry some momentum into Friday’s contest, having
outscored Laguna Beach a combined 31-8 in their final two regular-season
outings.
The late surge, as well as back-to-back conquests of 18-1 and 23-4
against Estancia the second round of league, allowed the Sea Kings to
outscore opponents, 159-156, on the season.
CdM is paced by two-time All-CIF performer Billy Eagle, a UCLA-bound
senior entering his fourth varsity postseason. Eagle, a sterling center
fielder relegated to designated hitter duties all season due to a
strained right (throwing) elbow, leads Sea King regulars with a .377
batting average (29 for 77). His four homers also top the rest of the
squad combined (three), he has scored a team-high 24 runs and his 21 RBIs
are second on the team.
Junior catcher Nick Karpe, a Mater Dei transfer, is hitting .372 and
leads the Sea Kings in hits (32), RBIs (29) and doubles (eight). He is
also among three CdM hitters with one home run.
Freshman outfielder Wess Presson (.356), sophomore outfielder Danny
Whitaker (.333) and junior third baseman Josh Bradbury (.324) have also
been offensive weapons for the Sea Kings this spring.
The CdM mound corps is led by junior Nick Rhodes, who figures to get
the start against the Swordsmen. Rhodes enters his second postseason with
10 varsity wins, after posting a 5-6 record with a 3.80 ERA this season.
He has 57 strikeouts and just 15 walks in just more than 66 innings this
spring, including a three-hitter over six innings in his final
regular-season start May 8.
Junior shortstop Keith Long, a three-year varsity veteran, and
sophomore center fielder Todd Macklin are the other two Sea Kings with
home runs this season.
St. Paul, meanwhile, had outscored opponents, 223-104, heading into
its Del Rey League finale against Bishop Amat, the league champion and
No. 1 seed in Division IV.
Coach Patrick Fitzsimons’ Swordsmen have a pair of quality pitchers in
sophomore Steve Salas and senior Houston Hernandez.
Salas, also the team’s top hitter, is 6-1 with a 1.76 ERA and two saves in nearly 52 innings. He has fanned 36 and walked 27. Salas is
hitting .500 (37 for 74) with four homers and 32 RBIs.
Hernandez is 5-2 with a 3.61 ERA and is also hitting .456 (36 for 79)
with one homer and 19 RBIs.
The CdM-St. Paul winner will advance to face either San Jacinto or
Bonita in the second round May 21.
Costa Mesa Coach Kirk Bauermeister was disappointed, but understanding
of his team’s failure to secure an at-large berth.
“I wish we were preparing for another game, because our seniors
battled all year,” Bauermeister said. “We lost some close games, but we
had our chances. A pitch here, or there, and things could have been
different. We had two games where we thought we had a guy struck out for
the final out and the next guy up won the game (for the opponent), but
that’s just the nature of the game. I think the three (Division IV)
at-large teams (Servite, Bonita and San Luis Obispo) are all quality
programs which were all very deserving.”
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