Mike SciaccaLike most high school coaches do...
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Mike Sciacca
Like most high school coaches do at this point in time, Laguna
Beach’s Curt Hanson is approaching the 2003 boys’ prep volleyball
season with a reserved optimism.
For one thing, he is in his first full year as coach of the boys’
varsity program, having spent the past four as a Laguna assistant.
He has a solid nucleus returning -- and it’s one that could help
make the transition from assistant to head coach a smooth one.
“I think we’ll be OK,” Hanson said. “We have some talent coming
back and some other players who gained experience last year.
“On the whole we should be pretty strong. You just never know,
though, how your team will come together until you get out on that
court.”
With the first full week of practice ending today, Laguna is
bracing for its March 4 season opener at Edison.
The Breakers are coming off a 13-8 season that included a second
place finish in the Pacific Coast League and a CIF quarterfinal
appearance.
A core group of returners includes senior outside hitter Matt
Anderson.
The 6-foot-4 Anderson earned first-team All-PCL and All-CIF honors
last spring and is considered the Pacific Coast League’s strongest
hitter.
“Having Matt back definitely is a big benefit,” Hanson said. “He’s
very athletic, passes well, plays good defensively and is probably
our best skill player.
“He’s our terminator, and other teams know who he is.”
Nick Aronoff was Laguna’s defensive specialist and youngest
varsity player last year as a junior, but the senior will play setter
this year.
Aronoff, the league’s tallest setter, plays club volleyball in the
off-season. He played on a local 17’s team that competed at the 2002
Junior Olympics and was part of a silver medal-winning 16’s team at
the 2001 Junior Olympics.
Laguna’s strong lineup also features junior middle blocker/outside
hitter Trey Chapel, senior middle blocker Mike Chiaverini and senior
outside hitter Nick Glavas.
A pair of sophomores, both up from last year’s junior varsity
squad, also figure into the mix: Luke Morris’ part is that of
defensive specialist and Talan Torriero, of whom Hanson says “could
make a big impact,” will play middle blocker.
Laguna, which played in Division V the past two years, is
competing in Division II level this year.
The upcoming season marks the 30th year of the CIF Southern
Section playoffs. One distinction that Laguna’s program holds is that
it is the only school to have played in all previous 29 postseason
playoffs.
The Breakers’ talent will be put to the test by a very formidable
schedule.
Among their four nonleague matches are games on the road at
Division I schools Edison, Huntington Beach, Capistrano Valley and
San Clemente.
They also play in three of the southland’s major tournaments: the
32-team, San Diego Tournament of Champions hosted by Francis Parker
High; the 16-team Tournament of Champions in Santa Barbara and the
Redondo Union Tournament -- the section’s oldest-running volleyball
tournament which began in 1970 -- which Laguna won a few years ago.
The Pacific Coast League schedule begins with an April 2 home date
with rival Corona del Mar.
Laguna last won the Pacific Coast League’s boys’ volleyball title
in 1998.
“It’s definitely one tough schedule that is very challenging,”
Hanson said. “With three big tournaments and four away nonleague
games on top of that, we’re not shying away from anybody.
“My immediate goal is to qualify for CIF. We need to stay healthy
and eligible in order to be a strong team. Like I said, you never
know what’s going to happen until you get out on the court.”
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