Marina’s magical run ends
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Mike Sciacca
The bright lights and big surroundings of the Pond of Anaheim is what
the Marina High boys’ basketball program deserved Saturday.
The Vikings were there, as part of a day-long celebration of boys’
prep basketball, where a total of six division champions would be
crowned by late that night.
Although Marina’s magical playoff run ended in a 64-57 loss to
Mission Viejo in the Division I-A final, it’s journey to the Pond
proved no less than captivating.
The Vikings opened the postseason with a win on the road, then won
three-straight home games to advance to the school’s first
championship game appearance since 1991 -- when it also finished
runner-up.
Marina led after one quarter, was down four at halftime, but kept
pace with the Diablos throughout the second half.
They were within two points of the lead late in the game, but
Mission Viejo scored the final five points to secure the victory.
Senior Matt Brennan scored 24 points to lead Marina, as well as
all game scorers.
“We could have played better,” Marina senior Stephen Becker said.
“We weren’t as ‘on’ as we had wanted to be. Still, we have plenty to
be proud of.”
Becker is one of nine seniors on a Marina roster made up of local
youngsters, many of whom have played together since their Huntington
Beach National Junior Basketball days, as well as through local
middle schools.
Marina Coach Roger Holmes could see something special about this
group of senior players, even when it entered the school as freshman.
Four players -- Brennan, Becker, Jeff Rivera and Matt Lee -- have
played varsity since their sophomore year, and James Lambert has been
a varsity letterman all four years.
“We had high hopes for this group ever since that freshman year,”
Holmes said. “Our biggest basketball question was how they were going
to deal with the lack of size issue. As a group, it has been fun to
watch the development over the course of their varsity careers.
“They have learned how to compete at the highest level and used
that experience to push their senior season all the way to The Pond.
”
Size was a factor in Saturday’s final.
The Vikings, whose tallest player was 6-foot-6 junior Jeff
Delaunay, went up against a Mission Viejo roster that listed four
players at 6-6 and its tallest at 6-9.
Marina, which won the 2003 Sunset League title, was one basket
short of getting a repeat title when it fell to Los Alamitos in the
regular season finale in February.
“We lost it by a basket, and that didn’t sit well,” Holmes said.
The Vikings left that loss behind in the regular season, then came
out with a defensive vengeance in the postseason.
Entering the playoffs as the Sunset League’s No. 3 entry, they
toppled San Antonio League runner-up West Covina, 83-68, in the
first-round. They followed that with a 48-45 victory over South Coast
League co-champion El Toro, the same league from which Mission Viejo
hails. Next, Marina surprised Marmonte League co-champion Thousand
Oaks, 66-54, and in the semifinal round, held down Simi Valley,
47-43, a team that finished third to Thousand Oaks in the Marmonte
League race.
“We have been led by our defense in the playoffs, and that’s
because our guys realized just how important defense is during the
playoffs,” Holmes said. “Again, experience played a huge role for
us.”
During the season, Lambert led Marina in scoring with a 17 points
per game average.
Brennan was right behind Lambert at 16.5.
Becker finished with an 11 points and nine assists per game
average, and became Marina’s single-game assists record holder by
dishing out 18 in the win at West Covina.
Those 18 assists also established him as the school’s career
assists leader. He replaced Rich Branning, who went on to star at
Notre Dame, as the school’s all-time assists leader.
“The best thing about our group is that the are all class people,”
Holmes said. “We pride ourselves on having this type of kid in our
program and these guys are such good people, that it is a pleasure to
work with them.”
Prior to Saturday’s championship tipoff, player parents, as well
as former Viking players and some fans, gathered in The Pond parking
lot for a large tailgate party.
The group greeted the Marina players off the team bus with loud
cheers.
“The Pond was fun,” Holmes said. “It was really an experience to
come out of the tunnel and into an arena with 17,000 seats.
“After player introductions, we turned back and saw that our
Marina section was full and that there were so many people there,
rooting us on. It really was great to play in such a setting.”
Becker, who said he had an “absolute feeling” about the potential
of this team when the current seniors were freshmen, said playing at
The Pond fulfilled one dream.
“Our goal was to play for a CIF championship, and we did,” he
said. “Our goal was to not only play in a championship game, but win
a CIF title. We were disappointed to not win it but, in some aspect,
we accomplished a lot by just getting there. It’s been a great
season.”
But the season wasn’t over for Marina after Saturday’s game.
On Tuesday , the Vikings (24-8) traveled to Oceanside to play El
Camino (30-2) of the CIF-San Diego Section in the first-round of the
CIF Southern California Regionals Division I playoffs.
The winner of the regionals tournament advances to the CIF State
Championships later this month.
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