Sailors out for aquatic redemption
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Chris Yemma
The Sea View League girls swimming title will now come down to league
finals, but with Newport Harbor High and Foothill battling it out,
the heated league race isn’t really a shocker.
The Sailors won the league water polo title in February, but the
Knights countered with a CIF Southern Section Division I title-game
conquering of Newport in March.
Now, the Sailors are looking for redemption in the other aquatic
sport of this year.
“Foothill’s the big competition for us right now,” Newport Coach
Ken LaMont said Wednesday after his girls cruised to a 108-61 league
victory over host Woodbridge at the William Woollett Jr. Aquatics
Center.
“They’ve got a very good team. They beat us in a dual meet, but
the standings in the league championship meet are weighed more.”
Meaning, if Newport wins the league meet, Newport wins the league
title.
Meanwhile, Foothill was on the other side of the wall Wednesday at
the aquatics center suffering its first league loss of the year -- an
87-83 nail-biter to Irvine, creating a tie for first between the
Sailors and Knights.
Both teams have one Sea View dual-meet loss, and both teams, led
by some of the top high school water polo players and swimmers in the
country, will be in top form Wednesday in the league finals at
Newport Harbor, with the next aquatics crown back on the line.
LaMont didn’t want to offer any predictions into Wednesday’s
finals.
“Foothill’s good, I’ll tell you next week,” he said after a long
pause, choosing his words carefully.
Junior Kally Lucas has contributed a good portion of the Sailors’
success this season. The water polo team’s third-leading scorer,
Lucas won the 500-yard freestyle Wednesday at the Woollett Center in
a CIF qualifying time 5:31.85, and won the 100 free in a CIF
qualifying 55.70, the latter race being somewhat of an experiment.
Lucas usually competes in the 200 free, accompanying her 500, but
LaMont said he was shifting people around to test for league finals.
The outcome of the 100 was a bit of a surprise for Lucas.
“I was really surprised,” she said. “That was pretty big. I’m not
used to [swimming] the 100. We were just trying to rotate and see who
does well where.”
Lucas also anchored the winning 200 free relay that clocked in
with a CIF qualifying 1:45.50. Bryndis Klein, Kayley Oka and Melissa
Wheeler swam the first three legs.
“[Lucas] has done a nice job,” LaMont said. “She fills in a lot of
stuff. She gets tired of doing the 200 and 500 every single meet, so
that’s why you see her doing the 100. But we can put her in events
like that and she can still do a good job, wherever we put her. We
can put her in any of the freestyles.”
Newport won eight of the meet’s 11 races, with Wheeler (200 free,
2:04.57), Katie Kepner (50 free, 26.22), Anne Belden (100 backstroke,
1:02.84) and Oka (100 breaststroke, 1:12.00) winning their events.
Jillian Chiapuzio and Marisa Cottam were second and third,
respectively, in the 200 free; Ashling Taylor and Katie Pedersen were
second and third, respectively, in the 200 individual medley; and
Blair Zeiser was third in the 100 free.
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The Newport and Woodbridge boys entered Wednesday’s meet untouched
in league and looking to feel each other out for the league
championship meet next week.
Woodbridge won, 95.5-74.5, to gain an inside track on the league
race, although Newport Coach Jason Lynch remained confident his team
will pull through in the finals.
“We’re second in dual meets now, but you can still be second and
win the whole thing,” he said. “Now we just have to win the
championship meet. I think we have a good shot.”
Max Joseph won the 100 butterfly in 56.16 for the Sailors, and
James Jackson clocked in with a CIF qualifying 56.36 in the 100
backstroke for the win.
Kyle Sherman swam an automatic time 47.99 in the 100 free for
second place, while also grabbing third in the 100 backstroke and 100
breaststroke.
Lynch said he is counting on the fourth swimmers to give him an
advantage at the league finals. In regular dual meets, each school
gets three swimmers for each event, but at the league championship,
each school will have four.
“Our depth I think is a little bit better,” Lynch said. “Our
junior varsity won handily [Wednesday], so it looks like our fourth
swimmers are better than theirs. But they’re very good, don’t get me
wrong.”
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