The year in sports
Mike Sciacca
The local sports year that was encompassed many emotions,
victories both small and large, and defeats that were crushing and
educational.
Area prep and youth sports teams had many successes in the past 12
months, and, as the final days of 2002 tick away, each of those teams
is looking to the future.
Gym-Dandy
The end of the 2002 sports year saw the second of four local
schools win a CIF Southern Section championship.
In late November, Marina High’s girls’ volleyball team capped an
improbable run to a championship season by defeating perennial power
Mira Costa in the I-A final at Cypress College.
“The girls’ just never gave up. I’m just really so proud of them,
knowing where they came from and how hard they have worked to get
here,” Vikings coach Jeff Caughthran said after that victory.
Gym-Dandy, Part II
History was made on Dec. 18 when the first indoor basketball game
was played at the middle school level.
Spring View had the honor of opening its doors to the first-ever
games, as the Spartans’ eighth-grade boys’ and girls’ teams hosted
teams from Vista View. The next day, Dec. 19, the eighth-grade teams
from Marine View and Mesa View took to the court.
Fittingly, all four middle schools had at least one team emerge
victorious: in eighth-grade girls’ play. Host Spring View defeated
Vista View in the very first game played in the new facility, and
Marine View beat Mesa View the next day. In boys’ eighth-grade
action, Vista View downed Spring View and Mesa View defeated Marine
View.
Ocean View School District Supt. James Tarwater was on hand for
the historic event.
The gymnasium/auditoriums at the four middle school sites did not
go up without a fight, as various lawsuits had been filed against the
projects.
But the sound of bouncing balls on the newly laid court was music
to Tarwater’s ears.
“This has been 2 1/2 years in the process, but coming here and
sitting and listening to the kids cheering, hearing the ball hit that
floor well, that makes all this worthwhile,” said Tarwater, who
appeared to be on cloud nine. “What I’m really proud of is the fact
that we did this without asking taxpayers for money.”
Fall
Huntington Beach High running back Patrick Harrigan tore up the
gridiron in the fall by rushing for several school records and topped
the county’s rushing list for most of the season before the senior
was sidelined by a late-season injury.
Edison was the lone area school to advance to the CIF football
playoffs.
The eighth-grade and seventh-grade girls’ basketball teams at
Sowers Middle School won league championships.
Mesa View Middle School turned back the competition to win the
school’s second straight Ocean View School District seventh-eighth
grade cross-country championships.
Summer
The big news was the staging of what has become a Huntington Beach
staple in the last few years: the U.S. Open of Surfing, which was
part of the 2002 Philips Fusion sports and music festival, which
featured competition in men’s and women’s surfing, BMX and
skateboarding
Spring
The Assn. Of Volleyball Professionals kicked of its 2002 AVP
season with the Huntington Beach Open, an event that included the
play of Ocean View High products Tracy and Katie Lindquist.
Senior Kristen McGregor set a new Marina High and Orange County
mark in the pole vault at 12 feet 9 inches at the CIF Southern
Section Masters Meet at Cerritos College.
McGregor and Marina junior Cara Walker advanced to the CIF State
meet, as did Huntington Beach High’s Brian Ruziecki, who finished
fifth in the boys’ shotput and eighth in the discus.
Winter
Edison wins the CIF Southern Section Division II girls’ soccer
championship.
“I think our girls did a tremendous job the entire season,” Edison
coach Kerry Crooks said.
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