Friday, November 30, 2007

Nationals Trade Church to Mets; He's "Tickled Pink"


“Hi, Mom, I’m a Met.”
“Is that good?” Karen Church asked her son this morning.
“Heck, yeah!” he replied.
RYAN CHURCH (pictured in a shot by Mike Collins) was traded today along with catcher Brian Schneider by the Washington Nationals to the New York Mets for right fielder Lastings Milledge.
“To go to a team that day in and day out is a contender, I’ve never been in that situation. I can’t wait,” Church told the media. "I'm tickled pink."
The Nationals finished 16 games behind the National League East champion Phillies, while the Mets lost out by a single game.
“Sellout crowds, that’s what you dream of,” Church said. “New York is the biggest stage in all sports. It’s an honor to be part of that. The sky is the limit.”
The Mets drew 3.8 million fans in 2007, 47,000 per game. The struggling Nationals by comparison attracted 1.9 million or 24, 200 per contest.
New York General Manager Omar Minaya, the same executive who brought Church to the majors with the old Montreal Expos, said Church would be the Mets’ starting rightfielder with all-stars Moises Alou in left and Carlos Beltran in center. Church has played mostly left field and center for the Nats but in the minor leagues he was almost exclusively a right fielder.

The trade comes after two years of rumors that Church, who did not live up to Washington General Manager Jim Bowden’s expectations, was on the block.
As MLB.com Washington correspondent Bill Ladson wrote: “Church was often criticized by the Nationals for not hitting for power, but the Mets loved the fact that he hit 15 home runs and 43 doubles while playing at spacious RFK Stadium.”
Minaya looked at the same numbers Bowden did and came to the opposite conclusion.
“He had a good season,” Minaya told a telephone press conference. “Forty-three doubles, .272, 70 RBI and 15 home runs in a big ballpark. He has a track record. We got an outfielder who had a very good year and can have an even better year. We think you have to take into consideration the ballpark. I think you will see Ryan hit for more power and you will see him steal some bases the way we play.” The Mets led the league in stolen bases this season.
Minaya said Church’s defense was important. “I’m big on defense,” he said several times in the press conference. He also mentioned Church being a lefthanded hitter. “It gives us balance,” he said.
Schneider will be the Mets’ starting catcher after the departure of Paul LoDuca. Milledge, 22, is seven years younger than Church, and is reputed to have superstar potential. He batted .272 this year, exactly the same as Church. He hit seven home runs and drove in 29 runs. He was a first round draft choice by the Mets in 2003.
“Ryan is as excited as the day he was drafted,” bubbled his mom. “I am so happy for him.”

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Hain, Jory Nominated; Boise Likes Farley

WES HAIN SHOOTS, HE SCORES!! Hain surpassed the all-time Cabrillo boys water polo scoring record this fall.

And his team won a Los Padres League title.

In recognition he has been nominated for the Lompoc Locker Room Athlete of the Year race.

Coach JOEL JORY, coach not only of the CHS boys water polo team, but of the league champion boys swim team last spring, LPL co-title holder with Santa Ynez, has been nominated for LLR Coach of the Year.


Hain's new career CHS record for goals was set by Robby Boyer 20 years ago. The nominations are the third this week from a Cabrillo grad/teacher/student/administrator/aquatics fan. The complete list of nominees can be seen in the right-hand column below our sponsors.

-0-


YOU can nominate right now! Just e-mail your nominee to pressboxprod@verizon.net in any of four categories: Male Athlete of 2007, Female Athlete of 2007, Coach of the Year and Team of the Year.

-0-

GRAPEVINE

Al Hunt reports that MATT SIMS’ medial collateral ligament, which kept him out of two late season Utah games, still hurts him, but won’t keep him out of whichever bowl game the Utes draw. Sims said the BYU-Utah crowd of 65,000 last weekend in Provo was the loudest game he’d ever played in. “Salt Lake City is only 30 minutes away. The teams absolutely hate each other,” he added....

Cabrillo tackle JAKE FARLEY is receiving interest from Boise State…. BRAD LILLEY, the music man of the Dodgers and Clippers, is off to Dubai this weekend to MC an international X-Games.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Statmeister on LHS Winter Sports; Tsunami; YFL



Braves Lose Grip on Bearcats

By Mike "The Statmeister" Loney



The winter sports season for LHS began Monday night before a small but enthusiastic crowd at Paisola Pavilion as the Brave wrestlers hosted the Paso Robles Bearcats in a non-league dual meet.


Unfortunately for the home team, they made several "rookie" mistakes resulting in the match slipping away. The final score, a lop-sided 52-21, did not reflect the close start to the match or the intensity of the Lompoc effort against a very good Paso squad.


After eight matches, Paso had a narrow 22-15 lead. And although they managed to stretch it to 28-15 with a pin, it seemed like Lompoc was coming back, when they suffered a stunning defeat at 130 lbs and the Bearcats never looked back. Head coach Patrick "Pat" Corbett, while noting that Paso Robles is traditionally very good and that the Braves were thin on numbers, summed up the evening by saying "We're young , inexperienced, and we made a lot of mistakes."


The evening started off with a perfunctory JV contest in which only three matches were held due to the shortage of available grapplers for Lompoc. The Braves will be sending a team to the Santa Maria Novice Tournament this weekend and any varsity or JV action disqualifies wrestlers from that tournament. The varsity will be in action at the Nipomo Tournament.


Here's how the varsity matches went: 160 lb: Lompoc's Adolpho Robles zipped out to a 9-4 lead in the 1st period, and then pinned Dylan Godwin with 1:28 gone in the 2nd.

171 lb: Double forfeit - neither team fielded a competitor.

189 lb: Lompoc's Favi Vargas was pinned by Dylan Sells at 1:14 of the first period.

215 lb: Pete Hernandez of Lompoc received a forfeit.

275 lb: The Braves’ Francisco Garcia gave up 35 lbs and a pin to Juslin Machaffrey, 1:09 into the first period. After the match Lompoc received a one point match score reduction penalty. 103 lb: 59 seconds into the match Rory Slikker got caught and pinned by Paso's Jovani Salazar.

112 lb: With PR on a roll Ed Pelkey tried to be the stopper. But he lost a three round war with Ryan Miller on a 7-5 decision, putting the Bearcats up 22-12.

119 lb: Kyle Pickles was able to cut the lead to 22-15 with a dominating performance over Coleman Stout, winning 7-1.

125 lb: The crowd was prepared for another all out war, but PR's Anthony Montgomery performed a truly superb mid-air reversal while being taken down, and was able to get a quick pin on Marcel Blow 1:27 into the first period. PR up 28-15.

130 lb: Joel Robles (Lompoc) was able to get a quick 4-1 lead in the 1st, which he stretched to a comfy 12-2 in the 2nd period. At the start of the 3rd, PR's Anthony Rivera had the choice of position and chose to be on top - much to his coach's very vocal displeasure. [Top puts one wrestler on top of the other allowing for easier control, but making it harder to score points quickly. Frequently the man on the bottom scores instead by 'escaping' that control for a point. Coach Montero had instructed him to take neutral position so that he would have the opportunity for higher-scoring takedowns.] In any event, a highly motivated Rivera managed to catch Robles in a mistake and get the pin only 19 seconds into the last period. This put PR up 34-15 and they cruised through the stunned Braves the rest of the night.

135 lb: Tyler Townsend (L) pinned by Brandon Ziltz (1:12 left 1st) 140 lb: Andrew Smith (L) pinned by Nick Holmes (1:33 left 1st) 145 lb: Forfeit to Eric Mrraz (PR) 152 lb: Masson Blow (L) managed to restore some Lompoc pride by pinning Eli Mina at 1:25 of the first period.

-0-

In JV action Virgil Cortez (L) was pinned by Colby Cox in the 3rd at 112, and Steve Galvan (Cesar Delgado) & Dustin Green (Daniel Kock) were both pinned in the first period at 171 & 189 respectively. Paul Vasquez (103) received a forfeit for the Braves.


-0-

Mixed Results in Soccer and Hoops
In the season openers for the 'dribbling' sports at LHS the results were highly varied. Boys’ Basketball opened on the road at Arroyo Grande, while the girls hosted the Eagles at Paisola Pavilion. In soccer, the boys hosted Righetti at Huyck. The girls, scheduled to play at Righetti, were grounded by a lack of available transportation and instead will play on Wednesday.



SOCCER--- The boys varsity soccer team won 1-0 on a goal by Jesus Aguiano. It was a tight game that they had mostly controlled, but had a hard time putting away. Although both teams had a number of scoring opportunities, many of Righetti's were foiled by good defense , but Lompoc had several shots hit the crossbar, uprights, etc. Coach Phil Galfano had particular praise for his defense (goalie Roberto De Luna and backs Diego Torres, Jairo Magana, Luis Castaneda, and Rudy Bueno), he also remarked that Righetti didn't seem able to match the Braves physical style of play.


While the JV team lost 2-0, Coach Omar Pimentel said that Pedro Hernandez who stepped in to replace the regular goalie played very well. He also was impressed with the effort level of the entire team. He played a lot of kids off the bench to evaluate various combinations in game situations, but that there had been no drop off in terms of effort.



BASKETBALL-- Basketball was not kind to the Braves Tuesday night. The boys varsity team was downed by four (45-41), and the freshmen were reputedly beaten by an unconfirmed score of 70-38 [Yikes! -hope its wrong]. Only the JV’s were able to squeak out a narrow 50- 45 win.



The girls’ side was even more frustrating. The frosh lost 66-35 and the JV lost 64-29. Coach Nic Jansen, while impressed with the Eagles’ size, speed , and shooting prowess, said the key was that, We didn't handle their pressure very well." He added, "We just need to improve". He did find one very bright silver lining however in the play of freshman Kaylin Barnes who had 21 points (or 25 points depending on which scorebook you read) for the frosh team.



The apex of uuuuggghhhh though was achieved by the girls varsity which played 46 minutes of smart, tough, hard-nosed ball - unfortunately the game lasted 48 minutes. After two quarters of see-saw action the Lady Braves managed to take a well-earned one point (25-24) lead into the locker room at half-time, largely due to the play of Jozza Ray. In the third, Lompoc pushed the lead to 40-34 with Denee Lane hitting several 3-pointers. But AG hit a bucket just before the buzzer to cut the score to 40-36 at the end of the period. Most of the fourth session was a back and forth exercise in intense defense. Numerous held balls, blocks, missed shots, steals, etc. meant that with 2:33 left the score was 43-38 in Lompoc's favor.


The Braves then began to falter and by 1:38 remaining the score was 43-42. The Eagles’ backcourt combination of Carly Ikeda (the coach's daughter) and Sara Caywood then took over the game. Ikeda, who had missed much of the third quarter with foul trouble, made several steals and Caywood drilled free throws (5-6 in the 4th) - including two at the 1:08 mark to give AG the 44-43 lead. In the last 2-3 minutes of the game the Braves had approximately half a dozen turnovers, 7-8 consecutive offensive trips that came up empty, and no points. Result: final 49-43 AG (AAAAGGGG) after being outscored in the fourth quarter 13-3.


THE REST OF THE WEEK @ LHS
Wednesday
-girls soccer (GSC) team at Righetti -girls water polo (GWP) team hosts Righetti at the LAC

Thursday -girls basketball (GBB) varsity hosts Lompoc TRNY[to sat] & frosh @ Cabrillo TRNY [to sat] -boys basketball (BBB) varsity @ SLO TRNY [to sat] & frosh @ Righetti TRNY [to sat] -soccer vs. Pioneer Valley [boys away & girls home] -GWP varsity @ Mistletoe (Newbury Park) TRNY [to sat]

Friday - ==>Tournaments above continue <=== -boys soccer (BSC) @ Cat/Dog (PR/Atas) TRNY [to sat] -wrestling: varsity @ Nipomo TRNY [to sat] & others @ Santa Maria Novice TRNY [to sat]

Saturday -===>Tournaments above continue <=== -GWP frosh/soph @ Cabrillo f/s TRNY

-0-


Tsunami Gobble Up Awards



The Tsunami Swim Club contingent at the SLO Gobbler Classic [16-18 November 2007] swim meet spent their time winning a bunch of races. The relatively small group (8 girls, 5 boys) won 12 races and placed in nine others at the competition which featured hundreds of swimmers from 6 to 22 years old.


Races at the event were held by gender in various age classes with an open class for the longer distances. Age class races are 'seeded' by previous times into three divisions - Blue (fastest), Red, & White.


The star of the meet for Lompoc was 12 year old Poala Hernandez. Competing in the 11-12 year old Girls class, she won all 8 Blue division races she swam while also beating her qualifying marks (some by incredible margins) in every single race. Her time reductions by race were: 50 yd Free [0.13 sec], 100 yd Free [0.69], 200 yd Free [4.04], 50 yd Back [3.24 in a 30 sec race], 100 yd Back [0.36], 50 yd Bfly [5.04 ], 100 yd Bfly [1.76], and 100 yd IM [5.70]. Her time in the 50 yd Butterfly (28.77, a 15% reduction from 33.81) was the 13th fastest swum by a 12 yo girl in California (243rd in the US) this year, and her 1:07.38 IM the 36th fastest this year.


Erin Gracyk (age 8) won three races (1 blue, 2 red), Erica Gracyk (9) won 1 white div race and swam well in 6 others, finishing 4th-9th in races with between 16 and 31 swimmers. Tiffany Hubbard (12) had five 2nds (all behind Hernandez), and an 3rd, 4th, & 5th in her 8 Blue Div. races.


Top 3 finishes were recorded by Abigail Carpenter [11] (3rd, White div) and Ryan Dang [8] (2nd & 3rd, White div), while Gavin Larson [16] swam in 5 Blue division & 2 Open division races. Other competitors were Rebecca Riley [11]- top 10 finishes in all 5 races, Emily Gracyk [11], Brittany Beidleman [11], Blake Espinosa [11], and Alex Hamner [11]. Congratulations to all !!

-0-


YFL FINAL WRAP


Senior Level [13 teams/ 2 div]

Lompoc Braves 4-3 2nd-Div A 6th seed 1-1 lost SF to champs

VV Conquistadors 5-3 4th-Div B 5th seed 0-1 lost QF to 4 seed

Intermediate Level [25 teams/ 4 divisions]

VV Conquistadors 6-2 1st-Div B 3rd seed 0-1 BYE,lost QF - 6 seed

Lompoc Titans 3-5 5th-Div C None

Lompoc Scorpions 6-1 2nd-Div D 2nd seed 3-0 BYE,WON CHAMP

Junior Level [27 teams/ 4 Divisions]

Lompoc Panthers 5-3 3rd-B Div 8th seed 0-1 lost 1RD to 9 seed

Lompoc Pistons 8-0 1st-C Div 3nd?seed 1-1 BYE,lost SF-?10 sd

VV Conqs 5-3 3rd-C Div 11th?seed 1-1 lost QF to Pistons

VV Cabrillo 6-0 1st-D Div 2nd?seed 0-1 BYE,lost QF-?10 sd

Bantam Level [20 teams/ 4 Divisions]

VV Conqs 6-1 1st-B Div 3rd seed 1-1 BYE,lost SF to ? 2 sd

Lompoc Rebels 2-6 4th-B Div None

Lompoc Packers 8-0 1st-D Div 1st seed 0-1 BYE,lost QF to ?8 sd

VV Conquistadors 5-3 2nd-D Div 12th seed 0-1 lost 1RD- ?5th seed

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Cabrillo Girls Swim Nominated; Smith Stars for UW


The Cabrillo boosters are busy! A nomination has come for another CHS aquatics team, this time the CHS girls swim team which went undefeated in the Los Padres League last spring and sent a 200-meter freestyle relay team off to win a CIF title. Pictured here are KATHERINE VEGA, BRIANNA MONTOYA, ASHLEY SMITH and KATHRYN NELSON of the champion relay team surrounding coach SCOTT ALVAREZ. Alvarez was also nominated for the Coach of the Year race.


YOU can nominate right now! Just e-mail your nominee to pressboxprod@verizon.net in any of four categories: Male Athlete of 2007, Female Athlete of 2007, Coach of the Year and Team of the Year. For the list of nominees to date just look in the right-hand column below our sponsors.

-0-

BASKETBALL


JOEL

In Seattle Monday night JOEL SMITH was on his game as he put up three consecutive three-point baskets to propel the Washington Huskies on a 23-7 run and a 32-16 lead.
Long Beach State rallied to within 41-33 at halftime but the Huskies hung on for an 84-69 victory.


Smith was 4-for-4 from beyond the arc and totaled 13 points. He was Washington’s second high scorer even though he came off the bench and played just 18 minutes. He pulled down three rebounds.


Coach Lorenzo Romar had this to say about Smith: “If you've noticed in our games whenever Joel’s feet are set he is pretty accurate from three. Tonight he got a lot of open looks so he knocked those down. In preseason practices I remember specifically telling Joel, ‘Why would you turn that shot down, I think it is going in every time.’ It is just a matter of him getting open looks and tonight he got them.”

Monday, November 26, 2007

Duffy Nominated Male Athlete of the Year


Left handed pitcher DANNY DUFFY has been nominated Lompoc Male Athlete of the Year for 2007. Duffy signed with the Kansas City Royals as a third-round draft pick after a phenomenal season at Cabrillo High where he posted a microscopic 0.58 ERA with 127 strikeouts.

In the Arizona Rookie League Duffy pitched 37 innings giving up just 24 hits and six earned runs. His ERA was a blue-chip 1.45. His strikeouts totaled 63 contrasted to just 17 bases on balls. His strikeout total ranked No. 6 in the league even though many pitchers (including all five with higher totals) pitched many more innings.

Baseball America, the baseball fan’s Bible, named Duffy the top pitcher in the league. It wrote:

Danny Duffy had the best pro debut of any young pitcher in the league, striking out 15.2 batters per nine innings and going 37 innings without allowing a home run. He did it mostly by working off his fastball. The Royals precluded Duffy from throwing his two-seam sinker and his slider, preferring for him to focus on improving the command of his four-seamer and curveball and using his changeup.


The Royals also worked on making Duffy's mechanics more consistent and keeping him from rushing through his delivery. He made progress on all fronts. His fastball sits at 88-92 mph and touches 94, and his curveball at times is a plus pitch.


"He got better at repeating his mechanics and maintaining his stuff late in games as the year went on," Royals pitching coach Mark Davis said. "His fastball was firm and live, and he really located down and away well."


-0-


YOU can nominate your favorite athlete of 2007 right now! Just e-mail your nominee to pressboxprod@verizon.net in any of four categories: Male Athlete of 2007, Female Athlete of 2007, Coach of the Year and Team of the Year. The list of nominees to date is listed in the right-hand column below our sponsors. Do it now. We'll be voting soon.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Nelson, Ur, McIntyre of CHS Girls Polo Nominated

A reader, no doubt wearing black-and-gold, has nominated the Cabrillo water polo duo of KATHRYN NELSON and SARAH UR (pictured here from the all-world website of Dave Riley) and last March’s CIF title team, and coach COREY McINTYRE, for Lompoc Locker Room End-of-the-Year recognition.
The CIF title, won in a 13-10 nail-biter over Arroyo Grande, was the first in Lompoc in any sport since 2003. The Q’s finished 28-6 as they went undefeated in the Los Padres League and won the Oxnard and Newbury Park tournaments. Ur and Nelson were voted CIF-SS Div. IV co-players of the year and McIntyre was CIF Coach of the Year. Ashley Smith and Rachel Nelson were elected to the all-Div. IV first team while Kirsten Pinkerton and Brianna Montoya were named to the second team.

Sarah Ur aims and fires.

Kathryn Nelson looks to pass. Both Ur and Nelson are now in the running for LLR Lompoc Female Athlete of 2007.


Coach McIntyre, possible LLR Lompoc Coach of the Year for 2007, is pictured here.
YOU can nominate your own favorites of 2007 right now! Just e-mail your nominee to pressboxprod@verizon.net in any of four categories: male athlete of 2007, female athlete of 2007, coach of the year and team of the year.
The nominees so far are listed in the right column below our sponsors. Take a look.


Saturday, November 24, 2007

Sims Starts in Regular Season Finale


Today in Provo, Utah before 64,000 fans MATT SIMS played his last regular season football game as the Utah Utes’ starting tight end. He got no receptions and BYU came back for a 17-10 victory, but Sims’ appearance in the starting lineup in his final game was a milestone for Sims and his roundabout college career.

Sims was a big part of the Lompoc High 2002 CIF championship team, playing both ways at tackle and winning all-CIF honors. He spent a season at Division II Humboldt State, then came home and sat out a year. Then he impressed at tight end at Allan Hancock, enough to win all-conference recognition and a scholarship to Utah.

Last year he played in all 13 games, with six starts. His four receptions for 62 yards led the Ute tight ends. He averaged 15.5 yards per reception. He had a catch for 23 yards at Utah State.
This year when the Utes went increasingly to a 4-wideout offense, he played in 10 of 12 games, starting in three. He caught one pass, for 10 yards, against Louisville.

Utah finishes at 8-4 with a bowl invitation likely. Last year the Utes were 7-5 at this point and received a berth in the Armed Forces Bowl in Fort Worth, Texas where they downed Tulsa.
-0-

VAI

At San Jose the Nevada Wolfpack fell to San Jose State 27-24 but VAI TAUA did not play. Nevada (5-6) completes its season on Dec. 1 hosting Louisiana Tech.
-0-
BASKETBALL

JOEL
Friday night at Madison Square Garden in New York Washington outrebounded Syracuse but could not best the Orange on the scoreboard as the Huskies fell 91-85 in the consolation final of the NIT Season Tip Off. JOEL SMITH entered the contest as UW's sixth man. He played 15 minutes and contributed three points on a three-point shot, three rebounds and an assist but was bedeviled by five turnovers. The game marked the first contest this season in which Smith has not appeared in the starting lineup at guard. In earlier games coach Lorenzo Romar started three guards and two forwards. Friday he went with a standard two-guard set. Now 3-2, Washington hosts Long Beach State Monday night.
-0-

NOMINATIONS

MATT SIMS, pictured above, has been nominated for the Lompoc Athlete of the Year contest. Also nominated are the the Los Padres League champion Lompoc High Braves basketball team and their coach JEFF JONES.

YOU can nominate right now! Just e-mail your nominee to pressboxprod@verizon.net in any of four categories: Male Athlete of 2007, Female Athlete of 2007, Coach of the year and Team of the Year.

Sims joins Ryan Church, Boo Jackson, and Miguel Ortiz in the male AOY sweepstakes while Jones joins Jim Allen, Roy Baca, Peter Anderson, and John Hernandez.
The LHS baseball team joins……. Oh, go look at the list in the right column below the sponsors.

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Church Gets Fans' Backing; More Nominations


DC fans back Church

MLB.com writer Bill Ladson called out National General Manager Jim Bowden a few weeks ago on his non-support of outfielder RYAN CHURCH (.272, 15 HR, 70 RBI). He even compared him to Yankee All-Star Paul O'Neill.


Church is pictured here in a picture by Mike Collins of Collins Photography.

The next week Nationals fans made very clear that they too support Church, and not Bowden.


In Ladson's weekly mailbag, a reader asked if general manager Jim Bowden is enamored with former Reds-


"Don't you think the real story is that Bowden is enamored with players he was responsible for bringing to the team? Ryan Church was a member of the Expos, so he doesn't get the love because Bowden doesn't get any credit for bringing him to the team. Not saying that Bowden doesn't have an eye for talent, just that he favors players who will make him look good in the eyes of the media and the ownership group. -- Swanni P., North Beach, Md.


Ladson---"Don't believe that. In fact, when Bowden took over as GM in late 2004, he looked over plenty of video of Expos players and felt Church was a superstar in the making. In fact, Bowden once compared Church to Cardinals center fielder Jim Edmonds. At the start of the 2005 season, then-manager Frank Robinson was planning to start outfielder Terrmel Sledge, but was told by Bowden to start Church instead.
I can tell you that Bowden doesn't dislike Church. I just think expectations are too high. Church is not a 30-homer, 120-RBI guy. He is a good complementary player who will likely be in a few All-Star Games before his career is over.


-0-


"The only change Church needs is in the attitude of the GM. If he's another Paul O'Neill, we shouldn't let Bowden mess it up again. You're too easy on the GM. -- Bill N., Washington, D.C.

-0-


Ladson-- "I can't tell Bowden how to do his job. The only thing I could do is criticize him. In the three years I've covered Bowden, it's very hard to get on him. I think he has done a great job.



-0-

Well, Ladson and I agree on one thing. Church will be seen in an All-Star Game or two.
==================================================
Church, Fabing, Allen, LHS Nine Named
RYAN CHURCH, Hancock College x-country runner ARIANA FABING, Lompoc High coach JIM ALLEN, and the Los Padres League champion LHS boys baseball team have been nominated for LLR End of the Year Awards.
Nominations are open to all readers. Just e-mail pressboxprod@verizon.net with your nominations for team, coach and male or female athlete of the year. The list of nominees can be seen below in the right hand column beneath our advertisers. E-mail us now!

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

Scorpions Nominated; The Simmons Report; Hoops


Scorps Nominated Team of 2007

The LOMPOC SCORPIONS, Central Coast Youth Football League Intermediate Division Champions, have been nominated for Lompoc Locker Room’s Team of the Year Award.

The Scorps won the CCYFL Super Bowl last Saturday with a 20-16 victory over the Five Cities Eagles. They are pictured above savoring their triumph. Earlier they demolished the Santa Maria Chiefs 37-0 and stopped the Atascadero Colts in the semifinals.

Their coach, JOHN HERNANDEZ, was also nominated, in the Coach of the Year category. Nominations are open to all readers. Just e-mail pressboxprod@verizon.net with your nominations for team, coach and male or female athlete of the year. The list of nominees can be seen below in the right hand column beneath our advertisers. E-mail us now!

==============================================

The Simmons Report

"The lockerroom page is awesome. The way you keep us informed is so wonderful. Anyway CJ's season has officially started. We went down last weekend and attended their kickoff tournament. CJ had three real good games. He is coming off the bench (sixth man) getting about 30-35 minutes a game, and playing defense like a giant. Out of eight teams we were the smallest out there but we were shutting down six-footers. We took fourth place in that tournament but played this past weekend in Sacramento and won the championship against the team that we lost to for third place the weekend earlier. The coach was quoted saying CJ was one of his five key players this year. So we are happy about the choice he made. I will get you some specific stats soon.

"As for Isaac, he hit us with a bombshell as he returned to school this fall. He has decided not to play his final year of baseball. He says he does not have the love and drive he once felt. However because the coach loves him so much, he will carry his scholarship and graduate in May. That's why we sent him and that's all we care about at this point. "
Nyla Simmons

(CJ Simmons is playing basketball at Santa Rosa Junior College. Isaac is at Lewis-Clark State in Idaho. Both were all-leaguers at Cabrillo)

===============================================

Basketball

JOEL SMITH scored two points, pulled down seven rebounds, dished three assists and made two steals tonight in New York but it was not enough. Texas A&M held Washington without a field goal for a key 5-minute stretch in the second half to beat the Huskies 77-63 in the NIT Season Tip-Off semifinals in New York. It was Washington’s first defeat of the season. Smith played 20 minutes as he started his fourth straight game.

-0-

In Mayville, North Dakota tonight University of Mary broke into the win column with an 82-73 victory over Mayville State. GEOFF WEST scored six points. After three games West is the No. 3 leading scorer at U-M with 8.7 points per game. He also ranks third in rebounds and assists. He has started each game and leads the team in minutes. His brother JASON WEST has contributed two assists in 17 minutes of action.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Statmeister Flags Heath; Reviews Bulldogs

By Mike "Statmeister" Loney







HEATH STARS AGAIN
Cal-Poly set a school record for a two round tournament with a 604 total at the Lamkin Cup Firestone Grill Cal-Poly Invitational held at Cypress Ridge Golf Course in Arroyo Grande. The Mustangs, who finished tied for 2nd (of 18 teams), were again led by JULIA HEATH (LHS). She strung together two of her top 5 rounds as a collegian for her own best-ever two round score of 147 which tied her for 5th.


-0-

LOMPOC SHOULDERS AHC X-C
Lompoc Valley runners led the way for the AHC Bulldogs cross-country team this season, especially on the women's squad where by the end of the year four of the six harriers were from "the Valley".
This crucial level of participation enabled Hancock to field the five competitors necessary to post team scores in the meets down the stretch after missing the season opener at Moorpark. This is a problem for many junior and community colleges. In several large races, 20-30% of runners represented schools that could not field a full team.


The premiere runner for the program this year was ARIANA FABING (LHS) (pictured at the top), who had taken a year off from competition, and hadn't started training until August. She was the #1 finisher for AHC in all eight of the races she started and, during the brief season, was able to reduce her time in the 3 mile (5K) races by over 4 1/2 minutes. The sole Bulldog qualifier for the state meet, she finished 116th of 189 competitors from around the world. [Some international racers come to U.S. JC's to try and qualify for entry into four-year schools. For instance, the SBCC team's only two women finishers were from Spain (65th) and Sweden (143rd).]


DUANIA EVANS (LHS) (pictured in the second shot) was recruited to run by the team #2 (Eden Haven) despite having only run X-C her senior year for the Braves - primarily as conditioning for soccer. She had not intended to compete and had not trained, but agreed to help. She exceeded expectations by scoring (usually #3 or #4) in each of her six meets, and cut her time by over three minutes.


Competing with her for that 3rd or 4th spot was TERRI LADJA (CHS) who also scored in all six races she ran, cutting two minutes off her time. Adding that required depth in four races were Paige Wagner and ALEJANDRA VALDEZ (LHS) who was a member of the LHS X-C team for one year as an underclassman. Except for Ms. Ladja, all are freshmen in athletic eligibility - but Ariana Fabing is a sophomore scholastically.



On the men's side, ORION CASTEEL (LHS) was the consistent #2 scorer behind Bishop HS grad Clay Behrendt, slicing his times over the four mile courses by a minute and a half. The young - all freshman - squad struggled at times, but was also assisted in two races by NATUAEL (TA-TA) GHEBNETNSAE (CHS). Coach Luis Quintana is exited about prospects for next year and is also trying to get many members of both squads to come out for track in the spring --- so stay tuned.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Coe, Martin @ Nationals; Anderson, Ortiz Named


Coe Helps Cal to Historic Finish
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. - Competing in its first national-championship race as a team, the No. 20 California men's cross country team took 16th overall with 434 points at the NCAA championships hosted by Indiana State University Monday. Cal wrapped up its most successful season in its history by finishing second among Pac-10 schools, as top-ranked Oregon won the national title.
"It was an intense race," said Cal head coach Tony Sandoval. "We had some people step up and it was a solid team effort. We were excited to come here. We beat some teams that we thought were a lot better than us. With four of our top five coming back, next year bodes well for us."
Highlighting the Bears' success were senior David Torrence and junior Yosef Ghebray. Participating in his final cross country race at Cal, Torrence toured the course in 30:47.7 to take 62nd, while Ghebray finished in 67th, clocking in at 30:53.6. Liberty's Josh McDougal won the individual title in 29:22.4 for the 10k course.
First and foremost among those stepping up was MICHAEL COE pictured here running against Stanford. He had finished fourth among the Cal runners last weekend at the Western Regionals. He moved up to third today with a time of 31:16.9 for 117th overall.
Cal Men's Individual Results: 62. David Torrence 30:47.7, 67. Yosef Ghebray 30:53.6, 117. Michael Coe 31:16.9, 142. Kari Karlsson 31:26.1, 154. Mark Matusak 31:34.1, 202. Chris Chavez 32:07.1, 203. Eric Lee 32:08.6
Oregon won the team title with 85 points, with Iona taking second (113 points) and Oklahoma State following in third (180 points). In the process of taking 16th, Cal also beat two ranked Pac-10 foes, as No. 13 Stanford placed 19th and No. 30 Arizona State came in 26th.

-0-

Martin runs race of his career
KENOSHA, Wisc.--At the NAIA nationals on Saturday in Kenosha Westmont placed 16th, three spots ahead of their rankings.
Over the 8k course senior NICK MARTIN of Lompoc finished fourth among Westmont runners, in 107th place with a time of 26:18.5.
“Nick ran the race a senior should run,” said coach Russell Smelley, “He was hurting, but just decided he needed to do better and passed a lot of people in the last mile.”
“I was happy with the race,” said Martin. “Where I finished compared to other runners in our region and within the team is about where I had hoped to be.
“I’m looking forward to not having ever to run another cross country race,” continued Martin honestly. “They’re brutal. But I think it helped knowing it was my last race. It gave me a little bit of extra incentive at times I just did not want to keep going. It gave me the motivation to keep moving.”
-0-
====================================================

LETTER TO THE EDITOR
Final Word on Big Game Scoreboard Snafu


“The "Big Game" scoreboard was turned off by mistake. The operator was NEW....BIG tactical error for this game.....and just turned the board off as a matter of "closing up shop". She/he had no idea. It was also mentioned that Coach Cross has received over 100 phones calls about this incident. "Sorry" to Coach Cross, who has way too much to do to field that many questions, some of which I'm sure were no fun to answer!So, I guess it can be summed up as an unintentional mistake, and I hope that the scoreboard keeper, who is a volunteer like the rest of us, does not feel too bad. We need all of the willing volunteers that we can get for these events!Thanks for giving us a forum to address these "earth shaking" issues!!

Russ Samaniego

-0-
========================================
Nominations Begin to Flow
MIGUEL ORTIZ
, Cabrillo cross-country coach PETER ANDERSON and the CABRILLO BOYS CROSS COUNTRY team have been nominated in the Lompoc Locker Room.com End of the Year Awards poll. Ortiz was nominated as Male Athlete of the Year, Anderson as coach.
Anderson’s 2007 X-C team qualified for the state meet by finishing fifth at the CIF Southern Section Div. III finals last weekend at Mt. SAC in Walnut.
Ortiz led the Conquistadores with a third place finish in 15:13 followed by BEN LI, EDDIE TOVAR, MASSIMO BEESON and OSCAR TORRES.

Sunday, November 18, 2007

Tough Weekend on College Grid, But in Hoops...


BOO

BOO JACKSON’s season has ended. Saturday night in the American Bowl Moorpark upset El Camino 42-41 in overtime. Boo struggled, completing only 10 of 31 for 188 yards with no touchdowns nor interceptions.

Here’s the story from Dave Thorpe of the Torrance Daily Breeze.

There were hoots and hollers from Moorpark's football players on the other side of the field. El Camino players stood in disbelief after minutes earlier believing they had won the game.
El Camino, which won the state championship last season, went into the season ranked No. 1 in the state, went 8-1 during the regular season and was a solid No. 2. The Warriors expected to be back in the state title game, but No. 7 Moorpark ruined its plans with a 42-41 victory that ended on a stunning turn of events in overtime.


Moorpark, pulling out all the stops, was down by seven points in overtime when a 15-yard run by James Walker set up his own 5-yard touchdown run. Instead of kicking the extra point and sending the game into a second overtime, Coach Jim Bittner decided his team would go for it.
The first try was a pass that fell incomplete, setting off a brief celebration by some of El Camino's players, but it turned out they had not seen a pass interference call that gave Moorpark another try from the 1-yard line.
Marcus Hunt then took a handoff and leaped over the goal line. The ball appeared to pop out, but Hunt landed on it in the end zone to give Moorpark an improbable American Bowl victory Saturday night at El Camino. The bowls serve as the first round of the Southern California Regional playoffs.
"This is not real," said El Camino captain Brent McNeil in the aftermath, with Moorpark celebrating in the background. "It's not real."
McNeil's comment summed up the feeling on El Camino's side of the field.
Moorpark (9-2) took a 34-27 lead on the first play of the fourth quarter, when quarterback Bryan Randolph hit Conrad Meadows deep for an 83-yard touchdown. Nico Grasu made the extra point, but barely, as it was a line-drive kick that barely cleared the post. It only took two plays for El Camino to tie the score. Quarterback Boo Jackson, who struggled most of the night, found Corey Surrency wide open for a 59-yard pass to the Raiders 2-yard line, then Jeremy Francis plunged in to tie the score, 34-34.
Then the defenses of both teams stepped up. A pair of Wes Racht sacks helped stymie the Moorpark offense, and El Camino couldn't find its rhythm until its first possession of overtime.
Starting at the 25-yard line in overtime, El Camino stuck to the ground, and Francis' 8-yard run helped set up Kenny Ashley's 4-yard touchdown. James Cullen made the extra point to put El Camino ahead, 41-34.
After Moorpark scored, its field-goal unit came out, then the Raiders called a timeout. Afterward, the offense trotted out onto the field and the rest is history.
"Did you see how our kicker was kicking our extra points?" Bittner said. "They were going in sideways, so we decided to go for it."
Last week, in El Camino's conference-title clinching win over Fullerton, Jackson had perhaps his finest game of the season, passing for 320 yards and five touchdowns and running for another score. Against Moorpark, Jackson had one of his worst outings, going 10-for-27 for 187 yards and no TDs.

Recognizing Jackson was having an off game, El Camino decided to pound the ball and had success doing it. The Warriors had 58 carries for 352 yards. Tavares Pressley led the way with 13 rushes for 135 yards and a touchdown.


The Warriors were in a 14-3 hole when Pressley busted a 51-yard touchdown run with 4:14 left in the first quarter to cut Moorpark's lead to 14-10.
El Camino took a brief 17-14 lead when it embarked on a 10-play, 72-yard drive that was highlighted by Jackson's 37-yard pass to Surrency and capped by fullback Pat Hill's 2-yard TD run. Hill had 11 rushes for 40 yards and two TDs.
But Moorpark answered with a seven-play, 67-yard drive, highlighted by Randolph's 30-yard pass to Daniel Wolverton and capped by Hunt's 1-yard touchdown run. Moorpark led, 21-17, and later took a 24-20 lead into halftime.
"Every chance we had, Moorpark kept responding with another big play," El Camino coach John Featherstone said. "I told the kids they were a good 8-2 team, but yeah, I'd say this was the best game Moorpark has played all year."
Ashley had nine carries for 73 yards, Francis had 12 carries for 45 yards and a touchdown and Jackson ran the ball five times for 46 yards for El Camino. Surrency had four catches for 104 yards.
"Good football teams have bad days," Featherstone said. "We played hard tonight. That team just played a little harder."
Randolph was 13-for-25 for 246 yards and two touchdowns for Moorpark and Walker led the running game with 19 carries for 101 yards and a touchdown.
The win avenges last year's 31-29 loss to El Camino in the National Bowl.
dave.thorpe@dailybreeze.com
-0-

LYDELL

Penn State fell at Michigan State 35-31 Saturday as the Nittany Lions relinquished a 24-7 lead. MSU scored the final two touchdowns. LYDELL SARGEANT was replaced in the starting lineup at left cornerback by A.J. Wallace. Lydell did see action but recorded no tackles nor assists. It was the second straight game Sargeant has not started, the first time this season he has not started back-to-back games. He has started eight of PSU’s 12 games and ranks third on the team in tackles with 65. The Nittany Lions are now 8-4 and await a bowl bid.

-0-

VAI

VAI TAUA saw action but did not start nor get a carry Friday night as Hawaii nipped Nevada 28-26 at Reno. The Wolfpack, 5-5, visits San Jose State Saturday.

-0-

MATT

At Salt Lake City Saturday Utah rolled over New Mexico 28-10. Junior Colt Sampson started at tight end instead of senior MATT SIMS who did not play. Sims had played in every game until last week. He started twice. The Utes (8-3) finish up at BYU Saturday.

-0-

BASKETBALL

In Seattle JOEL SMITH (pictured) was in the starting lineup at a guard spot and went 3-for-3 from the field and 1-for-1 from the line in 18 minutes tonight as the Washington Huskies rolled over Eastern Washington 82-68. The Huskies are now 3-0. They next take the floor Nov. 21 at the Great Alaska Shootout vs. Virginia Tech.
-0-

In St. Cloud, Minnesota the University of Mary Marauders fell to their second defeat Saturday, this time at the hands of Minnesota-St. Cloud. The score was 77-61. GEOFF WEST was second leading scorer for UM with 12 points including two three-pointers. U-M is next in action at Mayville State on November 20.

Friday, November 16, 2007

Harrison On Tape; Baca, Boo, Heath Nominated


Roy Baca at his desk
----------------------------------------------
J HARRISON Recording Here Now

Today we unveil a new feature of lompoclockerroom.com -- an interview with J HARRISON, head of professional scouting for the Cincinnati Reds.

Harrison was raised in Lompoc, but graduated from Righetti, then played baseball at Lewis-Clark State. He coached at Chico State then went into scouting with the Atlanta Braves and won the Reds’ top spot earlier this year.

The recording, an interview by the Oakland A’s broadcast team in September, can be found below the drawings of “Mr. En Fuego” and “Gregg” on the left. It can be heard just by clicking. Thanks to NYLA SIMMONS, J’s sister and mom of ISAAC SIMMONS (baseball at Lewis-Clark State) and C.J. SIMMONS (basketball at Santa Rosa JC), for sending it along. If YOU have a recording of a Lompoc athlete who is out of town send it along. Thanks, Nyla!
--------------------------------------------------------------------

ROY BACA First Coach Nominated

Today while taping “Lompoc Locker Room, the TV Show,” the first nomination for Lompoc Locker Room’s Lompoc Coach of the Year Award came from Mike “The Statmeister” Loney. Loney nominated boxing coach ROY BACA of Roy’s PAL Boxing Gym.

Baca, pictured, trained three young boxers who won state championships in the Police Activities League boxing program this year. Besides that, he continued, as he has for 10 years, to keep the PAL boxing program afloat. Congratulations, Roy.

Loney’s other picks were no surprises. He nominated El Camino quarterback BOO JACKSON for Male Athlete of the Year, Cal Poly golfer JULIA HEATH Female Athlete of the Year, and the Lompoc High girls soccer team, league champions for the first time, as Team of the Year.

The nominations list can be seen at the lower right of the screen below the sponsors. Send in YOUR nominees to pressboxprod@verizon.net

_____________________________________________________


GEOFF WEST Scores Eight but UM Falls

GEOFF WEST was the second leading scorer with eight points but University of Mary lost its first official game of the season tonight in St. Cloud, Minnesota. In the opening game of the American Family Insurance Classic opposite Nebraska-Omaha, West went 3-for-8 from the field and 2-for-2 from the line but UNO won 88-66.

Thursday, November 15, 2007

Statmeiser Reports; McIntosh, Boo, West

By Mike "The Statmeister" Loney



There are several Lompoc Valley sports activities scheduled for this Saturday.

-- The 2nd Annual LHS Dinner Show and Auction will take place at the LHS cafeteria from 5:30 to 8:00 p.m. This dinner and silent auction is a combined fundraiser for all 50+ clubs and sports teams at Lompoc HS. Among the auction items are artwork, jewelry, gift baskets, theater tickets, vacations & hotel stays, knick-knacks, and craft creations. For sports-inclined folks there is gym membership, sports memorabilia (including a Raiders jacket, Warren Sapp jersey, and football tapes), a TV, and an X-Box system. Contact person is Sue Coupland at 742-3473.




--Also on tap:LHS grad ARIANA FABING will be the sole Allan Hancock College cross-country representative at the California State Finals in Fresno. She will be competing in the womens 5K event on the same course that CIF uses for their state championship. [more on AHC X-C to come]




--The LOMPOC SCORPIONS will compete in the CCYFL Intermediate Level Super Bowl against the 5-Cities Eagles. The game is at 2:00 pm in Cambria. The Scorpions (the only valley team to reach the finals) advanced by defeating the Santa Maria Chiefs 37-0 in the first round of the playoffs at Cabrillo, and beating the Atascadero Colts in last week’s semifinal held in Santa Maria. Five Cities topped the Morro Bay Pirates (28-14) and the Paso Robles Bearcats (23-6) to reach the finals.


KATIE McINTOSH

KATIE McINTOSH (pictured) had a memorable junior year with the Chico State womens’ soccer team, a season that ended in a championship, but not many personal stats for Katie, even though she started every match. When the conference championship game went to a shoot-out Katie “guaranteed” a Wildcat triumph. Here’s how she saw it.

“I switched positions this year, to play defense. I began the year going between the center and outside back positions, depending on what my coach needed. I finally was able to settle into the outside position once we found someone to play center. I have played several positions for this team, so it wasn't a problem. I was fortunate enough to start every game and play most of all the minutes, unless we were able to get a big lead.

“Some personal highlights from the season would be the Monterey Bay game, where I was able to notch three assists. Another game would be the Sonoma game where a forward broke through our centers and I was able to get back to the goal as she dribbled past our goalie and got a shot off. I headed it out of the goal to keep them from scoring. I have had a couple saves off the line and some girls have joked that I'm like a second goalie.

“Basically I love my team and am just happy to have found such a great fit where I am able to continue to do what I love while being surrounded by great people. I was able to ‘guarantee’ a win because of the tremendous faith I have not only in our goalie but our team. I knew Kari, our goalie, definitely should have gotten CCAA (all-conference) honors and something just told me she was going to prove it in that shoot out. My friend took a couple pictures at the championship game but hasn't been able to send them to me yet, so I can send them when I get them. Well, thank you for all your interest in my career, it is much appreciated.”

========================================================

LETTER TO THE EDITOR --BROTHER WAS RIGHT ABOUT BOO



“I guess my brother’s opinion about BOO JACKSON a couple years ago about being the best athlete out of Lompoc is pretty much right on. I got to referee Boo last year in the American Bowl against Moorpark. The same match-up this year. I am refereeing the Southern California Bowl Saturday: Ventura vs. Palomar.” --Scott Kennedy
(Note: Jackson’s El Camino College team faces Moorpark this Saturday in the first round of the playoffs)
=====================================================

GEOFF WEST

About to begin his second season at the University of Mary in Bismarck, North Dakota, GEOFF WEST has already found himself profiled in the Bismarck Tribune. Here’s Wednesday’s story by Cindy Peterson. Nice story even if she mangled our town’s name.

University of Mary point guard Geoff West once shared something in common with NBA standout Allen Iverson. Neither put their full effort into practice.


When he was asked about his lackluster approach to time in the gym, Iverson once said:"... we're not even talking about the game, when it actually matters, we're talking about practice."


When West came into U-Mary's system last year, he didn't impress coach Juno Pintar in practice. Pintar got a better grasp of West's abilities when game time rolled around. "He was an unknown quantity," Pintar said of the junior from Lompac, Calif.


"We saw one DVD on him and I wasn't blown away. I thought he would be a serviceable backup. Even during our first practices he really didn't stand out. But once we started playing games, that's where we saw that competitive edge. He made so many big shots for us."


West and Iverson no longer have that trait in common. The 6-foot-2 West has taken over a leadership role in helping a young team learn the ropes of NCAA Division II basketball. And that means going full-speed in practice and correcting the mistakes of the younger players during the preseason.


"It's unbelievable how he has taken the reins of the team," Pintar said. "He's leading by example. Last year he wasn't a great practice player and this year he's working his tail off. "He's sending a message to the younger guys that 'if you don't bring it every day I will make you look bad.' He'll call the freshmen out if they aren't doing things right, but he's the first to pat them on the rear and say he's doing it to make them better."


West has plenty of reason to be excited about this year's team. The Marauders signed most of last year's top seniors in North Dakota - Jordan Wilhelm (Bismarck), Tate Kick (Dickinson), Justin Belohlavek (Mandan), Mark Bakkum (Steele-Dawson) and Marcus Fridley (Dickinson). They also recruited 6-foot-9 Bryce Fazekis of Park Rapids, Minn.


"Everybody looks at me to see (our) mental set," said West, an exercise science major. "We graduated a ton of seniors, and that role has dropped to me. It's not too much to handle. I like being in charge and making sure everybody is on the same page."


West attended Santa Rosa Junior College his freshman year, but he said he didn't feel that there was a place for him on the team. West used to live in Montevideo, Minn., and was childhood buddies with Lance Doppler, a sharpshooter who wrapped up his career for U-Mary last season. Through Doppler's encouragement, West transferred to U-Mary.


Pintar liked the way West fit into last year's team until things went awry late in the season. West, a right-hander, broke his right wrist. Not knowing the extent of the injury, West played eight games before sitting out the final three. After the injury, West saw his numbers dip. He finished the year averaging 6.7 points a game, including 24 3-pointers. West dished out 31 assists and snagged two rebounds a game.


"It hurt to shoot and dribble," West said. "Once I got in the game, my adrenaline got going and I forgot about it. I didn't do much shooting, and my shooting percentage was less."


Pintar noticed that West's production was on the decline, and he encouraged him to seek medical attention."Some of his passes weren't as crisp," Pintar said. "He passed up some shots. That's the best thing about Geoff, you take away his ability to shoot and he still does so much on the defensive end."


West had surgery on his wrist in February. He had a pin put in and tissue removed. He was in a cast for almost four months. But West was willing to look toward the positive side of things. "It made me work on my left hand," West said. "My shooting took awhile, but it's back to 100 percent."


The Marauders graduated Doppler (8.3 ppg, 47 3-pointers), Bill Shetler (6.1 ppg, 33 3-pointers), Nate Kaeding (1.3 ppg, 14 steals), Steele Tescher (1 ppg, 16 assists) and Ike Ezirike (4 ppg). They return leading scorer Eric Erdmann (11.3 ppg, 39 assists, 21 3-pointers) and Jordan Engelhardt (9.7 ppg, 73 assists). Also returning are center Zach Dosch (8 ppg), reserve center Scott Guggenberger (3.5 ppg, 4 rpg) and forward Danny Sandvig (4.3 ppg).


The rebuilding Marauders were picked by the coaches to finish seventh in the NSIC. Pintar and the Marauders are out to prove the preseason predictions wrong."We will face struggles early in the year as we get used to our new personnel," Pintar said. "Our attention to detail and doing the little things right, we're so inconsistent with that. I tell our guys to dream with their eyes open. If we want to be better than seventh, we better work our tails off."


And West fits into Pintar's plans."One of the reasons we switched around our offense this year is because we wanted to give Geoff some space to work with," Pintar said. "His athletic ability and quickness holds up really well at the D-II level. He has the ability to get by his guy. He can create some stuff for some other guys."


But a lot of the early scoring will need to go through Erdmann and Engelhardt. The younger players have shown flashes of brilliance, and their inexperience has been glaring at times. "I'm seeing some incredible things from the guys in practice," Pintar said. "There's been some inconsistencies. That's common for freshmen. We're going have to live with some of those inconsistencies. I'm going to have to be a more patient coach this year as those guys struggle through some growing pains. I'm going to have to look at the big picture. Now that we're postseason eligible, we will have to speed up the big picture."

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

Boo Jackson Offensive Player of the Year


BOO JACKSON has been unanimously named Offensive Player of the Year in the American Division of the Mission Conference for his spectacular season as El Camino College’s quarterback.

Jackson’s stats at the end of the regular season show him leading the conference with a 189.5 quarterback efficiency rating. He has thrown for 23 TD’s and been intercepted just four times. His completion percentage is 64.6 on 124 completions in 192 tries. His yardage total is 2047 for 10.66 yards per attempt.

-0-

CROSS COUNTRY
BERKELEY - For the first time in school history, the California men's cross country team will compete as a team in the NCAA championships. The No. 10 Golden Bears received an at-large bid to the 2007 national meet on Sunday.
The Bears finished in the top five in every race this season, including a fourth-place finish at last Saturday's NCAA West Regional where MICHAEL COE finished 40th with a time of 31:10.90 over the 10K course. He was the fourth Cal runner to finish with Yosef Ghebray coming in eighth, David Torrence 9th and Mark Matusak 11th.
The NCAA championships will be held on Monday, Nov. 19, on the campus of Indiana State. Cal was among 12 other teams that earned one of the at-large bids to the 31-team, 255-runner men's and women's NCAA fields.
-0-
IRVINE--COLIN HACKER helped UC Irvine’s men to finish 20th at the NCAA Regionals Saturday. Nick Mosey led UCI with a 60th-place finish of 31:42.10, followed by Sky Johnston in 90th (32:27.45), Hacker 116th (33:06.40) and Rusty Whisman 144th (34:02.00).
-0-
MONTECITO --Westmont’s men’s and women’s cross country teams, including NICK MARTIN, are preparing to compete at the NAIA National Championship in Kenosha, Wisconsin on Saturday. The men’s team is returning to nationals for the third year in a row.
The men’s squad will be led by seniors Aaron Megazzi and Robert Cherry. Megazzi, who earned All-American honors at last year’s national championship, has been the marquee runner for the Warriors over the last four years. Cherry was Westmont’s top finisher at the Region II Championship two weeks ago.
Joining Megazzi and Cherry will be Martin, a senior, sophomore Sean Adams and freshmen Jacob Goodin and Eric Williams.


-0-


WOMEN’S SOCCER

KATIE McINTOSH’s Chico State Wildcats were nipped in the first round of the NCAA Div. II playoffs last Friday by Cal State Los Angeles. Regulation ended scoreless. Chico’s season ended with a 13-5-3 record and a conference championship.

-0-

BASKETBALL

JOEL SMITH was third leading scorer tonight as Washington downed Utah 83-77. He tallied 11 points in 21 minutes with 3-for-4 shooting. He went 4-of-5 from the free throw line. He also contributed three assists as Jon Brockman lit it up with 31 points. With the victory the Huskies now go to Madison Square Garden for the NIT semifinals against Texas A&M.


Smith was also in the starting lineup Tuesday night as Washington destroyed the New Jersey Institute of Technology 88-47 in the Huskies’ first official game of the season. Smith was at a guard spot where he saw 20 minutes of action and racked up 12 points on 5-of-7 shooting including 2-of-4 from beyond the arc. He also made two steals, grabbed two rebounds and committed zero personal fouls.

-0-

GEOFF WEST was in the starting lineup for University of Mary’s second exhibition game vs. South Dakota State. His shooting touch was off a bit though. He went 0-for-6

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

Letter to the Editor: Big Game Gaffe



Letter to the Editor


Editor:

Here is the team pic from last night sans the scoreboard since crew in the score box turned it off about 30 seconds after the game was over. I can not remember that ever happening.I hope that it was by mistake. I would hate to think that adults would do that to, in this case, the Lompoc team, that wanted pictures with the scoreboard in the background. In the past, the winning team has always taken the trophy to the end of the field, and all of the players pose for pictures with friends, family, coaches, and other teammates. The "pulled plug" was noticed by the team, the coaches, the students, and the parents. If it was intentional, I find it sad and poor sportsmanship. I hope that is not the case.If we cannot lose and be good sports, stick with kiddie sports where everybody gets a trophy and has treats after the game. Russ Samaniego