Passionate about wind
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Lindsay Sandham
A handful of high school students sailed into the harbor at the U.S.
Sailing Center in Long Beach, looking slightly disheveled and
wind-burned, but all with beaming smiles on their faces and nothing
but drive and passion for their sport of choice -- sailing.
It was the Calvary Chapel High School sailing team, which has been
practicing for the Interscholastic Sailing Assn. national
championship, which starts today in Port Angeles, Wash.
The team, one of five in its district to make it this far, is
preparing to compete among the top 20 teams in the country.
It’s a remarkable achievement, considering that a couple years
ago, there was no sailing team at Calvary Chapel.
This caused quite the conundrum for Balboa Island’s Blake Warner,
16, who had to choose between attending high school at the Christian
private school in Santa Ana or at Corona del Mar High School, which
is known for its reputable sailing team.
In the end, Warner decided to go to Calvary, to be with his
friends and to study in a more faith-based setting. But his desire to
sail at the high school level didn’t decrease, and he began seeking
others who shared his passion.
Shortly after his classes began in fall 2003, Warner met Garrett
Laudenback of Costa Mesa and discovered that he also enjoyed sailing.
They are now co-captains of the 13-member team.
“At first, we just wanted to start a team,” Warner said. “We
didn’t expect to get this far.”
Calvary Chapel’s team is coached by Peter Wells of Newport Beach,
who won the 2004 U.S. Olympic trials in the men’s Mistral class.
“As a coach, I don’t have to try and motivate them,” Wells said of
the team. “They’re really focused for their age. They’re just a great
group of kids -- really enjoyable to coach.”
The team, which also includes Costa Mesa’s Mike Arthur, practices
most Tuesdays and Thursdays.
Mike Segerbloom, executive director of the sailing center and
coach of USC’s sailing team, said that Wells is a terrific coach, but
it is the hard work of Calvary Chapel’s team that got them to the
nationals and that will help them succeed.
Because the team is so new, the sailors’ expectations for this
weekend’s championship aren’t too ambitious.
“We’re going to have a good time,” Wells said of the six members
who will compete in Port Angeles. “But these guys have worked hard,
so we’d like to finish in the top five or six.”
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