Shadowlands
- Share via
Looking back, 5 years ago this week:
The United States men’s water polo team wins the gold medal at the
FINA World Cup, 8-5, over host Greece. The medal is the Americans’ first
since 1991, captured in the same event. In the final, the U.S. jumps out
to a 5-0 lead. Corona del Mar High product Chris Oeding scores two goals
to make the margin 6-1.
Estancia High product Dina Birch wins her first Adoption Guild Tennis
Tournament in the mixed open division with partner Desi McBride from the
Calabasas Tennis Center, defeating Nicole Elliot and David Roditi in
straight sets, 6-4, 7-6 (7-3). Birch trained as a junior at the Mesa
Verde Tennis Club and the Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club. In the same
tournament at the Newport Beach Tennis Center, 37-year-old Tim Downey
wins his third consecutive doubles title, teaming with former USC
standout and three-time All-American Sashi Menon, 46, to win in front of
an estimated 2,800 fans. The win marks Downey’s sixth championship in the
tournament.
Estancia High graduate Leah Braatz-Cochrane finishes her third season
with the University of Arizona softball team on a positive note, as the
Wildcats defeat the UCLA Bruins, 10-2, in the title game of the College
World Series. She notches first-team All-American honors for the third
time, finishing her junior year hitting .367 with 78 RBIs and 21 home
runs to lead the nation.
Two area golfers glide into the high school state championships at the
SCGA Members Club. In 110-degree heat, Corona del Mar High’s Chad
Towersey shoots par 72 to tie for fourth in the 122-golfer field, while
Newport Harbor’s Justin Shapiro tallies a 74 to tie for sixth, landing a
trip to the state championship.
Four Newport-Mesa athletes from three different high schools earn
trips to the state track and field meet in Sacramento after competing in
the CIF Southern Section Masters Meet at Long Beach City College. Costa
Mesa senior Eric Solis breaks his own school record in the boys 800
meters, finishing in 1:54.88. He set his previous-best time in the event
(1:55.90) a week earlier at the CIF Division III finals. Costa Mesa Coach
John Carney says he can’t remember a Mustang athlete qualifying for the
state meet. Corona del Mar’s Liz Morse qualifies with a time of 2:12.53
in the girls 800, breaking her previous-best time (2:14.25) accomplished
at last week’s CIF finals. Morse becomes the first state-meet qualifier
from CdM since Kelly Campbell in 1993. Newport Harbor freshman high
jumper April Ross and sophomore distance runner Alicia McFall qualify for
the state championships. Ross clears 5-2 on her first attempt, then
clears 5-4 on her second try to secure a berth in the state meet. McFall
qualifies for the meet after Nordhoff’s Elaine Canchola drops the girls
3,200. McFall (11:03.07) is sixth in the 3,200 but jumps up to join the
top five with her personal-best time.
Looking back, 10 years ago this week:
Due to budget constraints at the state and UC level, UC Irvine
athletic director Tom Ford announces the school is dropping baseball,
men’s cross country and men’s track and field. UCI suffers from a
$319,000 budget deficit. Ford decides against dropping UCI athletics to
Division II or Division III, citing “tremendous growth potential” at the
Division I level. Ford also announces that UCI will add a women’s crew
team for $8,000 as a non-NCAA sport. UCI baseball has been in existence
for 23 years, compiling a 643-565 record. The program became Division I
July 1, 1977, with its top Big West Conference finish being second in
1987. Cross country began in fall 1971, track and field in spring 1972.
UCI won NCAA Division II cross country titles in 1975 and 1976.
The Estancia High badminton team, guided by Lillian Brabander, in her
final match as coach, wins a CIF 4-A championship with a 12-7 victory
over Nogales at Cypress College. The Eagles complete their second
consecutive 20-0 season. The Eagles’ doubles team of Concha Gil and
Esther Viramontes sweeps, as does Doan Nguyen in singles. Estancia gets
off to a quick 3-0 lead, the clinching point coming when Estancia’s No. 2
boys doubles team of Dung Nguyen and Allan Tran down Nogales’ Porn and
Ram Chaturabul, 15-6, 15-6. The win marks the badminton team’s fourth CIF
4-A title. The Eagles won the title the previous year, 1985 and 1983.
Brabander, 60, retires after 29 years as Estancia’s girls athletic
director and 25 years as badminton coach. Her teams win 14 league
tournaments.
Newport Harbor’s Tony Mancuso finishes second in the shot put (58-10)
and fifth in the discus (163-5), a personal best, at the Masters Meet at
Cerritos College to qualify for the CIF State Championships at Cerritos
College. Mancuso is one of three Newport Harbor athletes in five events
to move onto the state championships. He hopes to reach 60 feet at the
state competition. Newport sophomore Gina Heads tosses the discus 142-7,
a personal best by about six inches, to win the discus, then throws 41-3
1/2 to qualify fifth in the shot put. Moments later, Newport freshman
Tina Bowman wins the Masters high jump title, clearing 5-6 on her first
try, the only Masters participant to do so.
The doubles team of Costa Mesa resident Ian Aler and Keith Evans wins
its second straight tournament in a week. The duo defeats Laguna Beach’s
Jon Leach and Chris Dunk, 6-3, 6-2, in the men’s open final of the 31st
Adoption Guild charity doubles tournament at Ron Pfahler’s Newport Beach
Tennis Club. They each win $2,000. Aler and Evans break Leach’s serve
twice and Dunk’s once en route to victory. They break Dunk in game seven
to go up, 5-2, and Aler follows with a dominating serve to clinch the
win. Aler, 26, played tennis at Corona del Mar High and lives in Costa
Mesa when he’s not traveling. Evans, 23, is from Cordova, Tenn. The duo
began playing together one year before at the GTE Grand Prix in
Indianapolis, and played for 40 consecutive days leading up to the
Adoption Guild semifinals.
-- compiled by Bryce Alderton
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.