Thompson relaying top skills
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Bryce Alderton
For the first time in the recent past, the Corona del Mar High
softball team has a coach that has lasted more than one year.
Nichole Thompson is in her second year guiding a program that
claimed its first CIF Southern Section playoff victory -- a 5-2
Division IV wild-card triumph over Mary Star of the Sea last spring
in its fourth straight year reaching the postseason.
They are all learning from a former two-time All-Pac 10 selection
at Arizona State who also had a stellar prep career at Woodbridge
High in Irvine as a second baseman.
Thompson, who played on two United States national teams in 2001
and 2003, competes for the Arizona Heat, a summer pro fastpitch team
that faces foes from Australia and China, among others.
But she doesn’t have to worry about commitments with the traveling
team overlapping with those of coaching. The softball season is in
the spring while the pro league conducts its games during the summer.
She tries to relay lessons learned from her career to the Sea
Kings, who through Tuesday were 10-7 overall.
She stresses pitching and defense and the players have responded
this season. The Sea Kings are averaging just more than 2.5 errors a
game.
“We’re playing average right now,” Thompson said. “We’re trying to
limit errors because errors are what teams are scoring on.”
Case in point is sophomore Michelle Tolfa, who is 10-6 as CdM’s
primary starter in the circle. Tolfa has struck out 129 this season.
The Sea Kings committed eight errors in two games of a
doubleheader against Back Bay rival Newport Harbor, but came away
with a split.
Tolfa, reigning Newport-Mesa Co-Player of the Year with teammate
Holly Van Hiel, is one of four sophomores and nine upperclassmen on a
team of 17.
The Sea Kings have four seniors, among them outfielder Heather
Lohrman, who led the team in batting (.342) last season.
Lohrman has played for three coaches, including Thompson, while at
CdM, but said Thompson brings a different set of traits to the team
than her predecessors.
“She’s brought skills and knowledge of the game and helped us jell
as a team, putting those skills together,” said Lohrman, who signed
with Niagara University in New York.
Thompson also wants the Sea Kings to run aggressively and for the
entire team to exude confidence while on the field.
She has already seen a progression in that department this season.
“The maturity has grown,” said Thompson, a two-time All-CIF second
baseman at Woodbridge who helped the Warriors to consecutive Division
II titles in 1997 and 1998, nearly the same time CdM’s program
floundered.
The Sea Kings didn’t field teams in ’98 and ’99.
“They’ve come out more focused. I want them to know they are
relied upon to play,” Thompson, a researcher for a real estate firm,
said.
Where the Sea Kings play their home games is also a topic of
discussion these days.
The booster club is forging ahead with fundraising for a field it
contends is a “glorified T-ball” diamond in need of repair.
Thompson said the field is not CIF compliant. The length from home
plate to the backstop is about 15 feet. The depth should be 25 feet,
she said.
CdM could not host a CIF playoff game under current field
dimensions.
Among potential changes outlined include adding a 30-foot
backstop, larger dugouts with roofs, and fencing 8 feet tall down
both foul lines.
To help with the fundraising, a youth softball clinic for children
aged 6-13 is planned from 8 a.m. to noon Sunday at the CdM field.
Call (949) 756-3232 to register.
Thus far, private donations equaling about half of the estimated
$50,000 total cost to renovate the field have come in, said Gary
Tolfa, in charge of fundraising for the team. The hope is to have at
least $35,000 by the end of this year, Tolfa said.
In the meantime, the Sea Kings will battle not only against
opposing teams in search of their fifth straight CIF playoff
appearance, but among themselves for playing time.
“We have a lot of skills this year and experienced players who
have a heart for the game,” Lohrman said. “We’re fighting for
positions. With so many new players, you’re never guaranteed a spot.”
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