In a league of their own
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Mike Sciacca
It’s been a long haul during nonleague play for the Ocean View High
boys’ basketball team, but the many travels and tournament games
during the first month of the season will take a backseat to
familiarity beginning Friday. At 7 p.m., Ocean View will open Golden
West League play.
The race for the Sunset League boys’ basketball championship also
begins Friday with a full slate of rivalry games: Edison is at
Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach entertains Marina, and Los Alamitos
visits Esperanza.
Tonight, though, the two leagues launch their girls’ races.
In Sunset League girls’ basketball at 7 p.m., it’s rivalry night
as defending champion Edison hosts Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach
goes to Marina, and Esperanza travels to Los Alamitos.
In Golden West League basketball, defending champion Ocean View
plays host to Saddleback at 7 p.m.
The Ocean View boys’ basketball team began its season in Texas at
the Lone Star Invitational, but will be home for its Golden West
League opener Friday against Saddleback.
Don’t let the Seahawks’ 6-6 record fool you. They’ve gone through
a tough nonleague schedule that included hosting its own Tournament
of Champions.
And regardless of the record, Ocean View will be the team to beat
in the Golden West race. The school has dominated the league, winning
the last six titles.
“We don’t think repeating will be easy, but we want to be in the
position to be the team to beat,” Ocean View co-head coach Jimmy
Harris said. “It will be an interesting league race, definitely.”
The main threat to Ocean View’s dominance in the league might come
from Costa Mesa, with Estancia and Santa Ana figuring to put up a
fight.
Ocean View has been led by its two senior captains, guard John
Greiner, whom Harris calls the team’s “leader by example,” and
forward Nick Kosearas, the team’s “vocal leader.”
“I think we’re ready for the race,” Harris said. “I think we came
out of nonleague play a little smarter as a team. It was a tough
beginning, because this group has been learning how to play with each
other.
“John and Nick have led us so far, and for the most part, I’m
pretty proud of this team and what it has learned during nonleague
play.”
The Sunset League boys’ basketball race could be a wide-open
affair, as several teams have had successful nonleague runs.
Edison, for example, returned home last week with the championship
trophy from the Walter Wong Tournament in Hawaii. Huntington Beach,
meanwhile, captured third place at the Katella Classic, and Marina on
Monday put the works on Westminster, a Golden West League rival of
Ocean View’s, 90-43.
If any one team could be considered the favorite, it might be
Esperanza.
On the girls’ side, Ocean View will be out to win another league
crown under second-year coach Jim Harris (who shares boys’ head
coaching duties with son, Jimmy). The Seahawks enter tonight’s game
against Saddleback coming off a 49-29 nonleague loss to Villa Park
Monday.
The road to the 2005 Sunset League girls’ basketball championship
runs through Edison and Esperanza. So says Marina Coach Butch
Fredlow, whose Lady Vikings host Huntington Beach tonight.
Marina is 9-5 overall and finished seventh at last week’s Larry
Doyle Orange County Championships, a tournament it co-hosted with
Edison. In the tournament’s seventh-place game, the Lady Vikings
defeated Woodbridge, the county’s eighth-ranked team, and went 3-1,
overall.
They also went 3-1 at a tournament in Henderson, Nev., reaching
the championship game.
“I think we’re doing fine,” Fredlow said. “We played a tough
nonleague schedule which I think, hopefully, has us ready for league
play.
“But I think if any team has aspirations of winning the Sunset
League, they have to go through Esperanza and Edison to win it.
That’s not to discount any of the other teams, but I see those two
teams as the teams to beat.”
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