Let the real games begin
Patrick Laverty
Newport Harbor High will begin the Sea View league boys basketball
season tonight without four-year letterman Jamie Diefenbach.
Diefenbach, a 6-foot-8 center who has signed a letter of intent to
play volleyball at UCLA, is out for the season after tearing the
anterior cruciate ligament in his left knee during Harbor’s trip to
Juneau, Alaska, during the holidays. The injury comes on the heels of
a torn ACL in his right knee that kept him out the entire 2002-03
season.
“I fell horrible for him,” Newport Harbor Coach Larry Hirst said.
“He worked so hard to rehab the other knee and he’s just a great
student and a great citizen.”
The Sailors (9-6) will attempt to compete for one of the top spots
in league without a big man for the first time in Hirst’s nine
seasons as coach. They’ll be immediately challenged tonight at 7
against visiting Foothill (10-6), a game that could decide who will
challenge favorite Woodbridge (9-6).
“I think it’s Woodbridge and after that it’s anybody’s guess,”
Hirst said.
A difficult nonleague schedule should have the Warriors prepared
to defend their league title of a year ago.
David Burgess, a 6-10 senior center who has committed to BYU, once
again leads the Warriors, averaging 17.3 points, 11.1 rebounds and 3.1 blocks. But Woodbridge also has 6-8 Jon Winder, who is averaging
8.9 points and 7.5 rebounds. Kyle Farrell, a 6-5 senior, also
averages double figures in scoring for Woodbridge.
No other team in the league can match Woodbridge’s height. With
Diefenbach, who was averaging 14.7 points before the injury, the
Sailors at least had a presence against Burgess. Without him,
Harbor’s game plan changes immensely.
“I think it’s going to be more of a collective effort,” Hirst
said. “I don’t think there’s one guy that can bring to the table what
Jamie did.”
Attempting to pick up some of the slack will be 6-2 junior Taylor
Young (more than 11 points per game), 6-5 junior Brett Perrine (eight
points per game) and 6-3 sophomore Dennis Heenan (nearly six points
per game).
Foothill, led by seniors Brandt Bangs (16.3 points) and Ben
Worrall (14.1 points), should be one of the Sailors’ primary
competitors for the top three spots in league. Hirst said Bangs might
be the best guard in the league.
Aliso Niguel (10-7) also looks like a solid ballclub. Michael
Roll, a 6-4 junior, leads the Wolverines with a 17.8 scoring average.
6-foot junior Terence Green (11.8) and 6-6 senior John Wise (9.2) are
also among Aliso’s leading scorers.
Despite sub-.500 records entering league play, Laguna Hills (6-10)
and Irvine (4-11) are also dangerous teams. Karter Stone, a 6-5
senior, is averaging 21.4 points and 6-5 senior Brock Tillotson is
adding 15.9 for the Hawks. The Vaqueros are led by Grant Verrill’s
15.9 points and Nasi Heider’s 13.8 scoring average.
*
In Ryan Curry’s first two seasons as Corona del Mar boys
basketball coach, the Sea Kings lost all eight Pacific Coast League
games they played against Northwood and University.
But CdM’s steady improvement under Curry led to a third-place
finish in league last year and with a team led by three senior guards
this season, hopes and expectations have grown.
“I’d like to think that we’ll make a run for the title and it goes
through Northwood and University,” Curry said.
University (11-3) seems to be the front-runner based on its early
season performance. Jon Anson, a 6-foot-3 senior, leads the Trojans
in scoring, averaging more than 23 points per game and is the primary
three-point threat for a team that isn’t afraid to launch the ball
from beyond the arc.
Northwood, the defending PCL champ, is 9-7 entering league play
and 6-4 sophomore Tino Zaragoza is averaging more than 20 points.
“The consensus is they’re down a little bit, but watching them
play, they’re still very good,” Curry said.
While Calvary Chapel (1-11), which lost to CdM in a third-place
playoff game last season, has struggled, both Laguna Beach (8-8) and
Tesoro (11-5) are also expected to battle with the Sea Kings to move
into the top half of league.
The Breakers, under first-year Coach Mark Hill, have particularly
impressed Curry.
Laguna Beach is led in scoring by 5-11 freshman Cheyne Martin,
averaging 18.3 points. Ivan Kovacevic, a 6-4 junior, is averaging
14.8 points and 9.1 rebounds.
Tesoro, with seniors on the roster for the first time, is led by
6-2 junior Patrick Marion and 6-3 junior Shane Keough. With 11 wins,
they’ve already qualified for an at-large berth in the playoffs, but
they’ll surely be looking for the automatic qualification that comes
with a top-three finish in league.
The Sea Kings will attempt to keep the Titans and Breakers out of
the top half of league standings. Pancho Seaborn leads CdM, averaging
17.3 points. Jay Northridge (12.2 points), Adam Freede (9 points) and
Ryan Lance (5.3 points) are also key contributors.
For an undersized team like the Sea Kings -- Seaborn is the
tallest starter at 6-3 -- the key will be transition basketball.
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