365-Day dominance
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Barry Faulkner
The top 25 Newport-Mesa sports stories of 2003, as selected by the
Daily Pilot sports staff:
1 Sharon Day reaches rare heights -- The 2003 Costa Mesa High
graduate left a sparkling legacy as a prep athlete, then began
building her legend as a two-sport performer at Cal Poly San Luis
Obispo.
As a senior, she captured Golden West League, Orange County and
Daily Pilot Newport-Mesa Female Athlete of the Year laurels for
noteworthy performances in track and field, soccer and volleyball.
In track and field, she won the second of her two CIF State high
jump titles and her season-best leap of 6 feet, 2 inches was tops in
the nation among her prep peers, as well as an Orange County and CIF
Southern Section record.
She was CIF Southern Section Division III Offensive Player of the
Year for leading the Mustangs to a division co-championship in
soccer, as well as the program’s first league crown and a 22-1-3
record that included a season-ending 23-game unbeaten streak.
She was also league MVP in volleyball and track and field, leading
the Mustangs to Golden West titles in both sports.
She finished a brilliant four-year varsity soccer career with 83
goals, 71 assists and 57 victories, then picked up where she left off
at Cal Poly, earning Big West Conference Freshman of the Year honors.
Her six goals and six assists, good for 18 points, ranked second
on the Big West Conference champion Mustangs and tied for sixth among
all Big West performers.
Considered by many the best female athlete ever produced by Costa
Mesa High, she is also slated to continue her high jump career when
the indoor season begins in February.
2 UC Irvine men’s volleyball ascends to No. 1 national ranking --
A 10-0 start earned Coach John Speraw’s Anteaters the No. 1 ranking
and helped draw a record crowd of 3,235 to the Bren Events Center for
a Jan. 31 match with No. 2-ranked Hawaii.
The Anteaters’ 20-11 record, the program’s most successful season
ever, included a record nine home wins, a 12-10 mark in the Mountain
Pacific Sports Federation and an unprecedented quarterfinal victory
in the MPSF championships.
The No. 1 ranking lasted two weeks and the Anteaters finished at
No. 5, as Speraw joined three other candidates for national coach of
the year honors.
Junior outside hitter Jimmy Pelzel became the school’s initial
first-team All-American after setting a school single-season record
with 593 kills. He was MPSF Player of the Week three times and
national Player of the Week once.
Libero Greg Ford was third-team All-MPSF and set a school
single-season record with 243 digs, while Nic Vislay set school
single-season standards with a .411 hitting percentage and 133 block
assists.
3 Misty May is half of a beach volleyball dynasty -- The Newport
Harbor High product added to an already brilliant career by teaming
with Kerri Walsh to win all 39 matches (and eight tournament titles)
on the AVP Nissan Series professional beach tour.
The duo’s dominance earned it the Team of the Year honors and the
eight AVP tournament victories produced more than $70,000 for May.
A former two-time NCAA Player of the Year at Long Beach State, May
proved she had fully recovered from reconstructive knee surgery late
in 2001 by blitzing the competition in her first season on the
revitalized AVP circuit.
She and Walsh also won five FIVB tournaments in 2003, including
the World Championships in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
She turned 26 during the summer season and eagerly awaits
competing with Walsh, a four-time first-team All-American while at
Stanford, in the 2004 Olympics in Athens, Greece.
May also helped the Irvine Valley College women’s team reach the
state final four this past season as an assistant coach.
4 Craig Fertig energizes Estancia football program -- The former
USC quarterback and assistant coach, who was also a head coach at
Oregon State, was a surprise hire in February to become the Eagles’
third coach in four years.
His homespun motivational techniques produced immediate success as
participants increased and the Eagles, 1-18 the previous two years
under Jay Noonan, won their first two games and three of their first
four last fall. A six-game losing streak ended the season, but
Fertig, who had been out of coaching since leaving Oregon State after
the 1979 season, has committed to returning next year.
5 UC Irvine women’s volleyball breaks new ground -- Coach Charlie
Brande’s Anteaters rebounded from a disappointing NCAA tournament
snub in 2002 by not only making their first tournament appearance
since 1988, but earning the program’s first tournament win.
A five-game triumph over Missouri in the NCAA tournament opener
was UCI’s eighth win in nine matches. But they bowed out with a
second-round loss to host UCLA to finish 24-10.
The 24 wins were a school single-season record and the 12-6 mark
in the Big West, good for a second-place tie, was also unprecedented
in Anteater annals.
Junior outside hitter Kelly Wing, who became the program’s career
kills leader (1,649), earned third-team All-American honors.
6 The Orange Coast College women’s basketball team wins first
state championship -- Losses in its final two regular-season games
made Coach Mike Thornton’s Pirates a longshot to survive the state
tournament, but things came together behind sophomore point guard
Nancy Hatsushi.
“We needed 100 things to go right for us to win the tournament and
almost all 100 of those went right,” Thornton said after a 69-61
title-game triumph over Contra Costa March 16 at the University of
San Diego.
Hatsushi, a Costa Mesa High product bound for Concordia
University, had 20 points, including five three-pointers, in the
title game. The first-team All-Orange Empire Conference performer was
named MVP of the state tournament, which included OCC’s semifinal
upset of top-seeded and three-time defending state champion Ventura.
OCC’s historic season ended with a 30-7 record.
7 The UC Irvine men’s basketball team’s third straight 20-win
season ends in NIT snub -- Coach Pat Douglass continued to guide the
team to the upper echelon of the Big West Conference, but, after a
second-place regular-season finish, the ‘Eaters lost in the
conference tournament semifinals for the third straight year.
Just days later, Douglass expressed disappointment when he learned
his team (20-9) would not be playing in the NIT for the third
straight season.
“I thought we got jobbed,” Douglass said.
UCI senior Jordan Harris completed his career with first-team
all-conference honors.
8 The Vanguard University women’s basketball team reaches the NAIA
Final Four -- Coach Russ Davis’ Lions made their fifth trip to the
NAIA tournament, but their first to the semifinals, before falling to
Southern Nazarene from Oklahoma, 62-49, to finish 28-10.
Senior Robbin Dittenbir and sophomore Jennifer Wilcox were both
All-GSAC selections and Davis was named GSAC Coach of the Year. Davis
also garnered Region I Coach of the Year laurels and was among six
candidates for national coach of the year.
9 Rodger Davis wins the Toshiba Senior Classic -- The Australian
entered the final round with a two-shot lead and wound up winning by
four strokes over runner-up Larry Nelson at the ninth annual PGA
Champions Tour event at Newport Beach Country Club.
Davis, who had never before won on American soil, parlayed a
pre-tournament chipping lesson into a 16-under-par score over 54
holes. His score missed the tournament record, set by 2002 champion
Hale Irwin, by one stroke.
Davis pocketed $232,500 for his effort and, for the fourth
straight year, the tournament donated $1 million in proceeds to
charity.
10 Taylor Dent’s breakthrough season includes three ATP tournament
wins -- The Corona del Mar High product, just 22, earned $544,457 and
the No. 32 final singles ranking with a strong campaign that included
wins in Moscow’s Kemlin Cup, the Thailand Open and the Kroger St.
Jude tournament in Memphis, Tenn.
His final victory in Memphis was a 6-1, 6-4 verdict over Andy
Roddick and Dent’s win in Moscow (a $142,000 payday) pushed him to
$1,099,287 in career winnings.
11 Aaron Peirsol continues to make a big splash -- A 2003 Newport
Harbor High graduate and the world record holder in the 200-meter
backstroke, he earned NCAA Swimmer of the Year laurels after winning
four NCAA titles (three relays and his 200-yard back specialty) at
the NCAA championships in March.
He also claimed five Big 12 conference titles and was named the
conference’s Freshman of the Year, but he wasn’t done yet.
At the World Championships in Barcelona in July, he won gold
medals in the 200-meter back, the 100 back and the 400 medley relay,
to up his international medal count to 13.
12 April Ross has banner senior year at USC -- The former Newport
Harbor High volleyball standout leads USC to its second consecutive
NCAA crown and a 35-0 record.
USC’s winning streak reaches an NCAA-record 47 matches and Ross, a
6-foot-1 senior, is named first-team All-American and Pac-10
Conference Player of the Year.
13 Matt Fuerbringer has breakout beach volleyball season -- The
former Estancia High basketball star and volleyball All-American at
Stanford becomes AVP Rookie of the Year.
The 6-foot-7 standout, paired with Casey Jennings, earned four
second-place finishes on the beach and amassed nearly $36,000 in
winnings.
14 Eddie Johnson reaches the NFL -- The Newport Harbor High and
Orange Coast College product is drafted in the sixth round by the
Minnesota Vikings, then becomes the starting punter.
He averaged 46.3 yards in two seasons at Idaho State, where he
earned All-American honors and was twice All-Big Sky Conference.
15 CIF Southern Section champions -- Corona del Mar High boys
tennis, Costa Mesa girls soccer and CdM girls water polo all claimed
section crowns in their respective divisions.
The CdM boys tennis team caps a 24-0 season with the Division I
crown.
The CdM girls water polo squad collects the Division II title in
2003 with a 26-5 mark.
The Costa Mesa girls share the Division III crown. It is the
program’s first CIF title.
16 World Team Tennis returns to Newport Beach -- Nine years after
the Newport Beach Dukes completed a five-season run, the Newport
Beach Breakers represented Newport Beach in the 10-team WTT.
A three-week regular season ended with a 7-7 record and a
second-place finish in the Western Conference. Lindsay Davenport was
the Breakers’ marquee player, but 16-year-old Russian Maria Sharapova
carried them to a brief stint atop the standings.
17 Scott Beerer drafted 47th overall by Colorado Rockies -- The
former Newport Harbor High and Orange Coast College baseball star was
tabbed in the second round of the major league draft.
Beerer, out of Texas A&M;, was joined in the pro ranks by former
Newport Harbor stalwart Charlie Waite (taken in the 23rd round out of
Mississippi by the Phillies) and former OCC standout Luke Allen (a
32nd-round pick of the Rockies).
18 Vanguard men’s basketball coaching carousel -- Lions Athletic
Director Bob Wilson fired Stephen French Jan. 30, then guided the
team as interim coach the rest of the season.
Wilson then hired Jim Degroot to guide the program in April, only
to have Degroot resign in September, without having ever coached a
game.
Wilson, a veteran college coach, returned to the bench for the
2003-04 campaign.
19 Chris Sorce resigns as Estancia High boys basketball coach amid
controversy -- After a four-week ordeal, Sorce resigned Oct. 15,
citing personal reasons, though many believe the well-respected
coach, who had gone 40-40 in three seasons, was forced to step down
over concerns about the use of program funds.
School and Newport-Mesa Unified School District personnel declined
to address specifics of the personnel matter.
20 Will Tipton, Bob Lovejoy win Jones Cup IV -- The Big Canyon
Country Club’s Director of Golf (Lovejoy) and men’s club champion
(Tipton) defeated the Mesa Verde duo of pro Tom Sargent and amateur
Steve Rhorer by one stroke to win the fourth edition of the annual
showdown between local golf clubs.
Lovejoy and Tipton shot 3-under 68 at Mesa Verde Country Club Aug.
1 to earn Big Canyon its third straight Jones Cup triumph.
21 Two local youth football teams have unbeaten championship
seasons -- The Jr. Midget Seahawks (ages 12-3) became the first
Newport-Mesa Jr. All-American team to go unbeaten, capping an 11-0
season with a 19-16 win over the South County Patriots in the
league’s Super Bowl Nov. 29.
The Jr. Pee Wee Division Black Mustangs, representing Costa Mesa
Pop Warner, became the league’s first team in 33 years to finish
13-0. They capped their season with a 28-7 win over a Hawaiian team
in the Dec. 13 Pineapple Bowl in Las Vegas.
22 Marianne Towersey wins another Tea Cup Classic -- The 19-time
Santa Ana Country Club women’s champion tops the four-player Tea Cup
field for her fifth title in the event’s seven years.
Her 5-over-par 76 at Mesa Verde Country Club July 25 is two
strokes better than runner-up Akemi Khaiat (Mesa Verde CC).
23 Orange Coast College duo dominate respective sports --
Sophomore Michelle Icban repeated as state 5,000 meters and 10,000
champion and was named Orange County Female Athlete of the Year by
county sports information directors.
Meanwhile, OCC freshman Sherry Tsai set three national and six
state records in winning four individual events and contributing to
two relay wins at the state swimming championships, won by OCC.
24 Pilot Cup thrives -- Volunteer tournament director Kirk
McIntosh supervised some 1,800 players on 96 teams, representing 24
public and private Newport-Mesa schools, who competed in the five-day
soccer tournament at the Costa Mesa Farm Complex.
This year’s champions were: Rea (boys grades 5-6), Carden Hall
(girls 5-6), Mariners Christian (boys 3-4) and Andersen (girls 3-4).
25 Prep spring windfall -- Newport-Mesa high schools had
unprecedented spring success.
Team titles were claimed in boys volleyball (Estancia, Newport
Harbor and Corona del Mar), girls swimming (Corona del Mar and Costa
Mesa), boys track and field (CdM and Estancia), girls track and field
(Mesa and CdM), baseball (CdM), boys swimming (Costa Mesa) and boys
golf (CdM), to go with numerous individual league champions in
swimming, tennis, golf and track and field.
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