Crowning achievement
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Mike Sciacca
The one thing Aaron Kavanagh tried to instill in his Ocean View High
baseball team Saturday was that it was all about enjoying the moment.
Sure, winning a CIF-Southern Section championship would be the
ultimate finish to what had already been an unforgettable season. Win
or lose, though, Kavanagh was intent on making sure Saturday’s
Division III title game against Temecula Valley at Angel Stadium was
a fun and unforgettable experience for his ball club.
“The kids were relaxed and having fun all week long, leading up to
the game,” said the second-year head coach. “But I wanted to make
sure that they were still having fun and enjoying the situation once
they got to Angel Stadium.
“They made it to the big game, and that’s the biggest
accomplishment. Winning it all would just be icing on our cake.”
For a season that ultimately was iced with a 3-2 victory over
Temecula Valley, giving the Seahawks the title, it got off to
anything but an auspicious start four months ago.
The team lost five players -- three to transfer, one moved away
and another quit -- before the first pitch. Kavanagh was forced to
bring up a pair of sophomores to fill out the varsity roster, and the
team’s record out of the gate was just 3-4.
“Man, to win CIF after starting the season off not sure what would
happen, is just amazing,” said senior Jeff Roth, who played shortstop
and was one of the team’s two key pitchers.
Roth, who went 10-1 on the mound and batted third in the lineup,
was named the MVP in the Golden West League. He had the best ERA in
school history and is second in the school record books in CIF
victories.
“I had a lot of faith in this team, though, and what makes this
year so special is that it just wasn’t one or two players who
contributed, but in every game, a different person would step up and
get the job done,” he said. “Literally, everybody in the lineup
contributed. And we all got along. We enjoyed being around each
other, both on and off the field.”
Kavanagh acknowledged a few turning points in his team’s
turnaround to the season.
First, there was a stiff portion of the schedule that had the
Seahawks play at Gahr of Cerritos, at home against top-ranked
Westminster La Quinta, and at Long Beach Poly. Ocean View went 1-2
during that three-game stretch, winning only at Poly.
Then came one last snag in late March -- a 2-1 loss in the title
game of the Coachella Valley Tournament to a Calexico team the
Seahawks had beaten by a 13-5 score earlier in the day.
That was Roth’s only pitching loss. And it was the last sting of
defeat the Seahawks would experience the rest of the season.
From there, they fashioned a 16-game win streak to end the
campaign, which included an 11-0 mark en route to the Golden West
League championship. Ocean View finished the 2005 season with a 25-5
record.
“The goal coming into the season was to play a tough schedule to
prepare for the playoffs,” Kavanagh said. “I think playing the
schedule that we did, accomplished just that.”
Save for a 7-0 victory over California High of Whittier in its
playoff opener, Ocean View had to rally in each of its final four
playoff games, but managed to find a way to pull out a win in each
instance.
Including Saturday’s title game.
“Whenever we were down, we never felt like we were out of any
game,” said junior James Kang, an infielder who was the Seahawks’
leadoff hitter. “There was always a feeling among us that we’d get it
done, that someone would come through. We would just never quit.”
Such was the case one final time Saturday. Temecula Valley scored
a run in the first inning and maintained that lead until Ocean View
pushed across two runs in the fourth inning.
Roth drew a walk and Alex Burnett reached base on a fielding
error. Geoff Klein then advanced both with a sacrifice bunt before
John Vega singled into right field to drive in Roth and tie the
score.
Matt Hughes later came up with an RBI single to left field to
bring Burnett home for an Ocean View 2-1 lead.
Temecula Valley scored the tying run in the top of the sixth to
make it 2-2, but Ocean View regained the lead for good in the bottom
half of the inning.
Marc Fernandez began the rally with a one-out walk. One out later,
Derek Martin came up with a bunt single. A throwing error on the play
allowed Fernandez to advance to third base.
Another throwing error on the same play -- the ball sailing into
the camera well along the third base line -- allowed Fernandez to
score what turned out to be the winning run.
Burnett, the pitcher of the year in the Golden West League who won
his final 10 starts to finish 11-3, hit two batters in the top of the
seventh. But with two out and runners stationed at first and second
base, Kang snagged a line drive between second and first base,
tumbled and popped back up to reveal the catch that ended the game.
“At that point, it was all kind of overwhelming,” Kang said of the
winning play. “It didn’t hit me at first that we had won it all. It
sunk in a little later, and it was an amazing feeling.”
Following Kang’s catch, he became the focus of a victory dog pile
by the Seahawk players.
The only other time Ocean View has won a Southern Section title in
baseball was in 1998 -- when Kavanagh was a senior pitcher on the
team. He didn’t pitch in the title game at Dodger Stadium, which
ended in a 9-3 victory over top-ranked and favorite La Quinta.
“I’m really proud to be a part of that championship team in 1998,
but this is special as a coach, because I had direct involvement in
this game,” Kavanagh said.
“We don’t have five Division I players on this team, but what we
do have is 13 ballplayers who enjoy playing the game and playing
together,” he added. “I’ll take that any day.”
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