A three-time charm
Mike Sciacca
It’s Friday, and Chris Stansbury is going through his normal routine.
It’s basically the same one he’s followed since he entered Laguna
Beach High four years ago: off to school, then to practice and after
that, back home for dinner and homework.
Seeing how it’s Friday, and the start to the weekend, he’ll get a
reprieve come nighttime -- no homework.
“That’s pretty much what I’ve done my four years here,” said the
17-year-old senior. “I know the route pretty well.”
The road Stansbury travels isn’t much different than any other
student/athlete at Laguna Beach High. But what does make him standout
from the majority is that he is a three-sport athlete -- and a key
player on each of the teams he plays for, to boot.
In the fall, Stansbury began by playing water polo. In addition to
afternoon practices, there were 6 a.m. calls, too, three times per
week.
In the winter he joined the soccer team and in the spring he caps
his busy athletic year by playing at the baseball diamond.
That’s where the 6-foot-5, 220 pitcher/first baseman can be found
now, playing for Coach Mike Schubert.
Stansbury got a late start with the baseball program as the soccer
season overlapped the start of baseball practice.
It’s not uncommon for a prep athlete to jump from one sport to
another, nor for that athlete to miss out on the start of one season
while wrapping up another.
In Stansbury’s case, water polo overlaps the beginning of soccer
season, the latter doing the same come baseball time.
“He joined our team late and in our first game last week, you
could tell his timing was off,” Schubert said. “But he’s a great
athlete and Chris will be his old self soon.”
Stansbury’s prep career began with water polo his freshman year.
“That’s the first sport I went out for,” he remembered. “I was
expecting to play both water polo and then baseball later in the
school year. But soccer was an afterthought. My dad suggested I give
it a try. We talked about not having the chance to do something like
this again, so I went out for soccer.”
Stansbury has gone on to have a two-year varsity career in all
three sports. Not only that, but he has excelled in each arena: a
two-meter defender in water polo, he has been an All-Pacific Coast
League pick and was named to the All-CIF Southern Section Division I
Third Team; in soccer, the Breakers’ goalie has been an all-league
selection; and in baseball, where he hit .400 last season, he is a
returning all-league player.
When the fall water polo season ended for Laguna last November
with a second-round loss to eventual Division I champion, Long Beach
Wilson, Stansbury went from the water to dry land for soccer.
Coach Andy Thomas said his arrival in late February was much
anticipated.
“Chris missed our preseason practices but joined his right at the
start of the season -- and we were waiting for him,” Thomas said. “He
came out late but if he didn’t come out, we would not have made the
playoffs.
Laguna did qualify for the playoffs with Stansbury being a key
force behind that qualification.
“As a coach, you make allowances for kids who want to play
multiple sports,” Thomas said. “High school is one of those last
chances to get that opportunity. With Chris, he’s an all-around
competitor and a phenomenal athlete. He’s so mature, very focused and
was a great leader for us.”
The well-spoken Stansbury, who carries a 3.3 GPA, says there are
great benefits to playing three sports. Not only has his sports
seasons overlapped, he said, but so has his training regiment.
“It’s great cross-training,” he said. “Water polo really improves
your overall strength, like with your legs, and in soccer, you really
work your legs. With baseball, you work a little bit of everything.”
The end of the prep baseball season in June will end Stansbury’s
high school sports career. He said for how much of his time was
consumed by school and sports, he wouldn’t trade any of it.
“I’ve had a blast,” he said. All coaches, honestly, would prefer
for an athlete to concentrate on just one sport. My coaches have been
great and all of them know how much I love playing all three of these
sports.
“They have all been very supportive all these years. One of the
main things I will miss about high school is playing sports.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. He can be reached at 494-4321 or by e-mail at
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