CdM seals 2nd title
Bryce Alderton
This year, the Corona del Mar High girls swimming team entered the
Pacific Coast League finals with the proverbial bull’s-eye tattooed
to its back as the team other squads targeted.
Maybe the recognition pushed the Sea Kings to swim faster, senior
Vivian Liao said.
The Sea Kings swam faster, for the most part, and capped an
undefeated season with their second consecutive league title
following Friday’s finals at Laguna Beach High.
CdM, which went 4-0 in league dual meets this season, tallied
562.5 points, 62.5 more than second-place University.
CdM sophomore Lexie Shue repeated as league champion in both the
200-yard individual medley (2:07.18) and 500 free (4:56.37) while
participating on winning 200 medley and 400 free relay teams.
CdM won all three relays, beating its prelim times in the 200
medley and 200 free races.
Shue, named the girls swimmer of the meet, broke her own league
record in the 500, set during Tuesday’s preliminaries (4:56.37) and
earned All-American status.
“I could see the splits on the clock every time I looked up, so I
just tried to keep my splits down,” Shue said about the 500. “You
have to go in with a positive attitude because it is a long event.
You have to believe if you want to achieve.”
The CdM boys finished fourth (245 points) out of five teams, but
several strong showings with a young squad gave Coach Mike Evans
optimism for the future.
Junior Bryan Buhagiar placed second in the 100 backstroke (56.73)
to University’s Soliman Eid (54.59) and swam a leg on CdM’s
fifth-place 200 medley and 400 free relay teams.
Junior Spencer Pirdy took seventh in the 50 free (23.80) and 11th
in the 100 free (52.91), both personal bests, and was one of eight
CdM swimmers to shave time off from the prelims.
“We set personal goals since a number of kids didn’t get points
from the preliminaries,” Evans said. “They all swam good times.”
Times continued to drop on the girls side, as well.
CdM sophomore Ashley Chandler took .13 seconds off her prelim time
to win the 50 free (25.10), touching just in front of University’s
Katelyn Schumacher (25.18) while Liao placed fourth in 26.40 and
Katya Eadington took fifth in 26.38.
Freshman Stephanie Gabert won the 100 breaststroke in 1:04.45,
while teammate Tumua Anae (1:10.24) took second. Gabert finished
second to Shue in the 200 individual medley (2:10.68) while senior
Kim McKay placed second in the 500 free (5:16.88). McKay also took
third in the 200 free (1:58.06).
Jordan Anae tied with Tesoro’s Amanda Bebout for second in the 100
backstroke (1:01.86).
Chandler (53.91) and Liao (55.54) placed third and fourth,
respectively, in the 100 free while sophomore Jackie Duzac and
freshman Katie Indvik placed fifth (1:02.34) and seventh (1:06.03),
respectively, in the 100 butterfly. Brittney Wigley finished seventh
in the 500 free (5:50.22), displaying CdM’s depth.
Tom Money took fifth in the 200 free (1:55.34) while Thomas
Pearson placed eighth (2:01.30) for the CdM boys. Blake Schoenberg
won the consolation final in the same event in 1:56.95. Robbie Fries,
Michael Berry and Trevor Gladych all improved on their prelim times.
Unlike last year’s finals when the CdM girls defeated University
by just eight points after winning the 400 free relay, CdM this time
had the meet wrapped up heading into the final event.
CdM Coach Doug Volding could exhale.
“I was not overconfident coming into this one,” said Volding, in
his 20th year at the helm. “I knew [University], as always, was going
to push us. I was more cautious with this group [than last year], but
it showed I didn’t need to be. These girls took charge from the
start.”
Thirteen CdM girls qualified for Friday’s CIF Southern Section
Division II preliminaries at Belmont Plaza in Long Beach in search of
a team title after last year’s second-place finish.
“That is what we’ve been working toward all year,” Liao said.
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