Emotions spike on the court
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Former Los Angeles Dodger Glenn Burke is credited with creating
the high five in the mid-1970s. The high five is an elevated version
of the hand slap exchanged by athletes to communicate celebration,
motivation, even consolation, for as long as I’ve witnessed
competition.
It can be argued that volleyball players were exchanging elevated
hand contact, most typically with both palms, long before the gesture
was seen on the baseball diamond.
Regardless, volleyball, with a stoppage of play after every rally,
is, arguably, the sport in which joy of competition can be best
displayed. This came to mind watching the Newport Harbor girls team
compete through the CIF Southern Section and CIF State playoffs the
last couple weeks.
In the Sailors’ season-ending loss to visiting Liberty of
Bakersfield in the Southern California Division II regional final
Dec. 3, the emotional gamut was on consistent display from players on
both teams.
The presence of a near-capacity crowd, including hundreds who made
the drive from Bakersfield, and the high stakes of the meeting
between section champions, seemed to amplify the emotion surrounding
every point.
Freed from the subjective stakes that drove most spectators to
either cheer or slump after every point, it was hard for me to watch
players converge into a leaping huddle of teammates after a
successful play, as their opponents tried to rally themselves after
the opposite result, without smiling.
From the first point to the last, a four-game, two-hour roller
coaster ride, emotion flowed from players, coaches and fans in
seemingly ever increasing outbursts.
Tears erupted from players on both teams after Liberty, the
deserving victor, clinched a trip to the state title match it won
four days later at Cypress College.
The match was clearly everything to those athletes and quite
something to those lucky enough to have seen it firsthand.
*
The CIF Southern Section enrollment-based divisions for boys and
girls basketball have been set. Newport Harbor’s boys and girls teams
will compete in Division II-AA, while the boys and girls teams from
Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa and Estancia will compete in Division
III-A.
The boys and girls teams from Sage Hill, in somewhat of a
surprise, will compete in Division IV-A.
First-year Sage Hill boys coach Steve Keith qualified his
expectations of the Lightning this season by stating he was unsure
whether or not he’d ever seen a Division V game. He may not see one
this season, either.
*
After weeks or practice and months of offseason preparation, the
excitement of the season opener can be overwhelming for some prep
basketball players.
One Newport-Mesa player, who shall remain nameless, exhibited this
point in a humorous way. Told by the coach to substitute into a
contest, the player stood quickly and, while thinking he was removing
his warmup, peeled his game jersey over his head, leaving only a
white undershirt. Spectators, seeing this take place, quickly alerted
the player, who, grinning sheepishly, slipped the jersey back over
his head before reporting to the scorer’s table.
*
Is it just me or is Brian Song, a University High junior recently
named second-team All-Pacific Coast League in boys water polo,
playing the wrong fall sport?
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