Sailors seeking repeat finish against Knights
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Bryce Alderton
To play tough, one must practice tough.
For the Newport Harbor High girls water polo team, which will
attempt to win its second straight CIF Southern Section Division I
championship, its third overall, when it faces Sea View League rival
Foothill at tonight at 8:15 at Belmont Plaza in Long Beach, that
means suiting up against the boys.
The Sailors (27-3) have taken these CIF playoffs seriously, hardly
resting on their laurels after three prior victories, but rather
looking ahead to how they could better prepare for the next opponent.
Preparation has included film sessions watching the United States
men’s Olympic team, weight lifting after a game and scrimmaging
against Newport’s boys water polo team.
The Sailor girls have practiced against the boys three times in
the past three weeks, senior goalkeeper Kendal Nelson said following
Friday’s 12-7 victory over Montebello in a semifinal.
Nelson and teammate Elizabeth Layton combined for 18 saves against the Oilers, including several on point-blank attempts.
The second-seeded Sailors viewed hours of film on Montebello
leading up to the contest and Nelson said they were more than ready
for battle.
“We are not taking it easy at all,” Nelson said. “Everyone
practices hard. We were so prepared with how [the Oilers’] would
shoot it.”
Nelson said practicing against the boys brings a different
perspective.
“It’s more difficult because they play a different game than we
do,” Nelson said. “We pretend it is a game.”
Opposing teams who have faced the Sailors could say the same
thing, especially when it comes to the counterattack.
Few teams boast speed like Newport’s. The Sailors are athletic and
transition very quickly. The ball often winds up in the hands of
seniors Anne Belden and Ashling Taylor, who have tallied 85 and 78
goals, respectively.
The Sailors, though, wanted to get stronger, literally.
The impetus for training against the boys came from an inkling the
Sailors might face Foothill for a fourth time this season.
In the CIF championship game, no less.
“We want to be tough like Foothill,” Taylor said after Newport’s
15-2 first-round victory over Huntington Beach.
The Knights, making their sixth straight appearance in a CIF title
game, are 2-1 against the Sailors this season. Newport won the league
meeting, 10-8, on Jan. 12 before fourth-seeded Foothill (26-3) drew
most recent blood with an 8-4 triumph in the semifinals of the Irvine
Southern California championships Feb. 5. The latter was the Tars’
last loss.
Senior Melissa Wheeler, who has committed to Cal, said the Sailors
upped their intensity level in practice and games after the loss to
the Knights, whose smothering defense make it difficult for teams to
get many open looks at the goal.
She stopped short of predicting how far the Sailors would go in
the playoffs, or who they would play, following the victory over
Huntington Beach, opting instead to focus on what the team could
control.
“There is no slacking in practice,” Wheeler, fifth on the team
with 37 goals -- behind Belden, Taylor, Kally Lucas (51) and Leah
Robertson (45) -- said at the time. “Everyone is taking it one game
at a time. We know there will be harder games down the road.”
Taylor rolled up her sleeve to reveal a quarter-sized bruise on
her left bicep. She said the mark came during a scrimmage against the
boys.
“One of my friends hit me,” she said with a smile.
One final hurdle remains for the Sailors, who defeated the
Knights, 10-8, in the Division I title game a year ago. That victory
ended Foothill’s CIF title streak at four.
Foothill, the No. 4 seed, upset top-seeded Santa Margarita, 5-2,
in the semifinals. Coach David Mikesell’s Knights defeated Burbank,
15-5, in the first round, then topped Long Beach Wilson, 11-4, in the
quarterfinals.
Sailors’ Coach Bill Barnett offered no bold predictions except to
say, “It will be a challenge.”
“We know them and they know us,” Nelson said. “It will be a fight
until the end.”
Would the Sailors want it any other way?
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