His best shot
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Mike Sciacca
Brian Ruziecki went into last weekend’s 2002 CIF State Track and Field
Championships with his typical work ethic and a simple game plan.
There was nothing fancy about his preparation for the two-day event at
Cerritos College in Norwalk, where Saturday’s final drew a crowd of
10,751. He just went about his normal routine: a good night’s sleep and a
well-balanced breakfast each morning.
It can’t get much simpler than the way Ruziecki readied himself to
compete in the shot put and discus events at the big meet. His goals were
to go there, give it his best shot, and have fun.
“That’s what my main goal is with all the sports I play -- to have
fun,” said the Huntington Beach High senior. “I went to Cerritos the
first day hoping to make the cut, then I wanted to hit my best marks in
the final.”
In his first appearance at a State meet, Ruziecki met his first goal
as he hit qualifying marks in two events, finishing fourth in the discus
and eighth in the shot put, during Friday’s preliminaries.
To qualify for Saturday’s final, an athlete had to finish among the
top nine in an event during Friday’s prelims. There were 24 competitors
in the shot put and discus.
Although he didn’t record personal bests in either event during
Saturday’s final, the 18-year-old did place fifth overall in the shot put
at 58-feet, 11 1/4-inches, and eighth in the discus with a 171-10, among
all divisions.
His best personal mark in the discus is a 191-6, and his top effort in
the shot put is an even 61-feet, he said.
Last year, Ruziecki reached the CIF finals, where he was third in the
Division II discus.
“I was hoping to [personal record] but it didn’t work out that way,”
he said.
Over the years, Ruziecki had fun with the sports he played at
Huntington Beach High -- and succeeded, too.
He was with the track and field program for all four years and served
as the boys’ team captain his senior year. He established records for a
freshman, sophomore and junior performer in the shot put and discus, he
said, and as a senior, his marks in both events are second only to those
of record-holder Scott Moser.
Prior to the track and field season, the 6-foot-4, 240-pound Ruziecki
played football for the Oilers, the last of his four seasons with the
program.
He also served as captain of the football team and played outside
linebacker, offensive tackle.
He earned All-Sunset League first team honors as an offensive tackle.
“I loved participating in both sports and had a great time here at
Huntington,” said Ruziecki, who serves on the Associated Student Body
cabinet. He also is president of the glee club, which is made up of 10 or
so members of the football program. The group, he said, sings at various
school assemblies.
Ruziecki isn’t a talker out on the field; rather, he tends to lead by
example.
His Huntington Beach High athletic career was preceded by the example
set by his older brother, Jeff, now a first baseman at Wake Forest
University. Ruziecki, in turn, has set the standard for his younger
brother, Eric, a sophomore who played junior varsity football and
basketball with the Oilers.
When Ruziecki walked away from the State meet last weekend, he did so
after having advanced the farthest he had in his high school track and
field career.
But he’s not hanging up his cleats for good -- he’s just exchanging
his track shoes for the football variety. On June 28, Ruziecki will begin
daily practice at Mission Viejo High as he prepares for the upcoming
Orange County North-South Prep All-Star Football Game.
He said he will play defensive end for the South in the 43rd annual
contest, which will be played July 12 at Orange Coast College.
When he’s done with that game, he’ll have some time off to enjoy the
summer. In the fall, he will be attending UCLA on a partial track and
field scholarship.
That might not sit well with his father, Jim, who is a USC graduate.
“He’ll get over it,” Ruziecki laughed.
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. He can be reached at (714)
965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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