Sailors sprint into finals
Rick Devereux
Apparently, being a water polo school has its advantages. At the
beginning of the boys swim season, Newport Harbor High Coach Jason
Lynch had to erase a message from his chalkboard that read, “Newport
Harbor is a water polo team that swims.” But because the Sailors are
so proficient at water polo (they made it to the second round of the
CIF Southern Section Division I playoffs the past two years) the
sprint swim events have excelled.
Case in point was Wednesday’s Sea View League preliminaries at the
Newport Harbor pool. All four Sailors who swam in the 50-yard
freestyle qualified for the championship final to be held Friday,
also at Newport.
“It’s great,” Lynch said. “We try to pride ourselves that we can
swim sprint freestyle because that translates into water polo for us.
I think the guys take pride in that. We train a lot for the freestyle
and sprint freestyle, so I think they’re pretty prepared for that.”
The top Tar in the 50 free was sophomore Daniel Furman, who blazed
through all competition with a 21.88 finish, the top qualifying mark.
Senior Sean McGhie qualified fourth (22.31), followed by sophomore
Telford Cottam (fifth in 22.60) and senior Michael Bury (seventh in
22.71).
But it was Furman’s finish that had people talking. Before the
season started, Furman had a personal goal to finish faster than 22.5
in the 50 free. Wednesday’s time not only beat his personal goal by
.62, but came close to breaking the school record of 21.51.
“I do think that’s a possibility for him by the time he’s a
senior,” Lynch said regarding Furman’s chances of owning the school
record in the near future. “He’s only a sophomore. He’s going to grow
and get stronger, which is all he needs really.”
“I want to win league and it’s going to be tight because the 50 is
always close,” Furman said. “I want to win that and if I could get
the record, I would be really happy. But I’m not going to set that as
one of my goals.”
“The guy he’s going against from Aliso Niguel [Austin Luther] is a
junior, so he’s a little more experienced,” Lynch said, but also
added that Furman has a great shot at winning the event.
The only other Tar to qualify first for Friday was McGhie with a
48.12 finish in the 100 free. Furman qualified eighth in the 100
free.
“Even though the 100 is still a sprint, I think it’s too long. I
definitely like the 50 a lot more,” Furman said.
Other Sailors swimming Friday in championship finals are Clay
Jorth (200 and 500 free), James Jackson (200 individual medley and
100 backstroke), Eric Carlson (200 IM and 100 back), Kyle Sherman
(100 back) and Carson Hill (100 breaststroke). Along with his
qualifying 50 time, Bury also secured a spot in the 100 butterfly
final.
The 15 spots for Friday, at least one in every event, are the most
of any Sea View team, edging out Irvine (14) and Foothill. The fact
that Newport did so well is a tribute to the mental concentration of
the team considering many swimmers are also taking final exams during
the day.
“I think it affected two kids in particular that took [advanced
placement] tests today,” Lynch said. “I think it’s just draining,
emotionally draining. They come out here and they’re just ... We had
these other kids taking the tests and rushing out here and barely
getting here.”
One such swimmer was Jorth, who finished fourth and eighth,
respectively, in the 200 and 500 free.
“I didn’t do as well as I could. I was kind of stressed out
because I had an AP test today. I feel like I will go a lot faster on
Friday. I wasn’t feeling it today,” he said.
Even with the distractions, the Tars impressed their coach.
“Overall, I think we swam really well,” Lynch said. “I think it
was a great team performance.”
Only the top eight advance for a chance at the league championship
Friday, but many Newport swimmers qualified for consolation finals
(contested among those who had the ninth through 16th fastest times
Wednesday).
Sherman was .11 away from making into the championship final in
the 100 fly, finishing in 58.0.
Other consolation finalists from Newport include: Cottam (13th in
the 100 free), Michael Robinson (200 free, 100 breaststroke), Trevor
Armstrong (100 IM, 100 breaststroke), Aaron Blei (200 IM, 100
breaststroke), Max Robison (500 free, 100 fly), Hunter Alvarado (500
free), Brett Auer (200 free), Riley Hayes (500 free) and Sean
McDonald (100 back).
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