Sea Kings stifled in showdown
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Chris Yemma
In less than five minutes, the Corona del Mar High girls soccer team
was put on the edge of its season.
The Sea Kings, at one point fighting for first in the Pacific
Coast League, fell lower than they would have liked following a 4-0
league loss at Northwood Thursday.
Corona del Mar (11-9-1, 5-3-1 in league) was once riding a
six-game winning streak, beginning Dec. 16 with a win over Bay rival
Newport Harbor and ending nearly a month later, but the Sea Kings
have now won just two of their last six games, with one last chance
to of their own accord to continue into the postseason.
That last chance will be host Laguna Beach Tuesday at 3:15 p.m. --
a must-win for the Sea Kings to have a shot at qualifying for the CIF
Southern Section Division II playoffs.
Northwood (12-7-1, 6-1-1), which is tied for first in league with
Tesoro, wrestled CdM into its precarious position Thursday, quickly
but not painlessly.
Before the Sea Kings could blink, Northwood was up 2-0 four
minutes into the game after goals from junior Caty Cope and senior
Milada Rakijian. From that point forward it was a game of catch up
for CdM, but the Sea Kings lost that battle as well.
“When [Northwood] put the first goal in, all right, mistakes
happen,” Corona del Mar Coach Bryan Middleton said. “But it was like
the dagger in the back when they put the second goal in.”
But the dagger went deeper in the second half, after goals in the
50th minute and 66th, to erase any hope of a comeback.
“I think after the first five minutes our head did go down,”
Middleton said. “We didn’t show up today. We might as well have
stayed home.”
Staying at home, although not in the sense Middleton was using,
was something Northwood Coach Steven Tatone noticed improves the Sea
Kings’ game dramatically.
The Timberwolves eked out a 2-1 victory at Corona del Mar Jan. 18.
“[The Sea Kings] didn’t play with the fire they did before,”
Tatone said. “We were talking about this at halftime, that for
whatever reason -- and this is two years in a row -- they just
haven’t brought it here.
“When we play them [at CdM], they’re a different team.”
But Corona del Mar must win on the road Tuesday at Laguna Beach, a
team that sits in the cellar of the Pacific Coast League at 1-6. CdM
defeated the Breakers, 2-1, on Jan. 20.
The Sea Kings are not likely to face as much resistance from
Laguna Beach as they did from Northwood, which entered Thursday’s
game fresh off of a 2-0 loss to University, and was looking for the
quickest possible redemption.
CdM just happened to be the Timberwolves’ next opponent, which
created a dismal situation for the Sea Kings.
And the two goals right off the bat forced Middleton to employ a
different game strategy, one that involved a more aggressive
offensive approach.
“One goal you’re fine; you can get back in it pretty quick,”
Middleton said. “But with the two, you’ve got to play more offensive.
I tried that in the second half and put another forward up front...”
Middleton rolled the dice, but didn’t get the numbers.
“It’s like flipping a coin -- do or die,” Middleton said. “You
might get a couple goals back real quick, or you might get a couple
scored on you, which happened to us.”
So, now it really is do or die for the Sea Kings, who will play on
Laguna’s artificial turf Tuesday.
“We just have to regroup,” Middleton said. “It’s an artificial
field and I think our speed up top will play to our advantage.”
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