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Vaulter’s plans are broken

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Chris Yemma

Newport Harbor High defending state champion pole vaulter Allison

Stokke will be going under the scalpel today and will miss the rest

of this season after breaking a bone in her ankle Monday.

Stokke, who won the CIF State championship in the event last June,

said she was testing a larger pole she had never used before -- at a

practice session at Golden West College -- and didn’t get a high

enough vault to push her clear to the landing pad. She landed

awkwardly in the concrete launch box and broke her tibia in her right

ankle, she said.

Stokke confirmed Tuesday her injury will require surgery --

involving the insertion of two screws into her tibia -- and she will

be rehabilitating for four to six months.

“I’m really upset because I was aiming for state,” Stokke said by

phone Tuesday. “I haven’t peaked this season yet and I’ve put in a

lot of hard work that won’t go fulfilled quite yet.”

Fresh off claiming her second Sea View League title --

accomplished last week -- the sophomore, in just her second year

competing in the event, holds the national sophomore outdoor record

with a 13-foot, 5 3/4 -inch clearance she nailed at the Surf City

invitational earlier this year. She was just inches off breaking the

national high school outdoor record of 13-8 1/2 set in 2003.

Her injury Monday dealt a major blow to her campaign of shooting

for four straight state championships. But, it could have been worse,

Newport girls track and field coach Eric Tweit said.

“Luckily, she’s only a sophomore,” said Tweit, who doubles as

Newport Harbor’s athletic director. “It’s just one of those things

that you sit there and ask, ‘What can you do?’ The bottom line is

this is the nature of sports -- it can happen to anybody and what are

you going to do?”

Stokke said she has plans to do upper-body strength training,

along with swimming, in the time she will be sidelined.

A former gymnast, Stokke turned to pole vaulting after a family

friend planted the seed in her head. Growing tired of gymnastics,

Stokke visited Tweit in October of 2003 with an interest in joining

the team.

In her first competitive vault, she broke a school record, and the

coaching staff knew right away she had a future in the event, Tweit

said then.

Just a few months later, as a freshman, Stokke grabbed the state

title.

The Newport star cleared 12-8 at the state championships for her

best jump last season, only to return early this season and top it.

She won the event at the Eagle Invite March 5 at Santa Margarita with

a 13-4 vault to tie the national sophomore record, while also taking

three unsuccessful shots at 13-9, which would have been the national

outdoor high school record.

After clearing 13-4 then, Stokke said she was aiming for 14 feet

this season, a lofty but realistic goal. She would have been almost a

shoo-in for this year’s state title.

“She had a very good chance to repeat as the state champion,”

Tweit said. “She was the favorite; she worked very hard. But it seems

like she’s staying positive rather than dwelling on the negative.

She’s had a good year and this will provide motivation for her to

come back.”

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