Boys volleyball: CdM, Tars’ square off for CIF title
Barry Faulkner
CYPRESS - Bragging rights come no bigger than those at stake for
Back Bay rivals Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor high schools in
tonight’s CIF Southern Section Division I boys volleyball final, set for
7 o’clock at Cypress College.
“These kids will be talking about this one long after (tonight),” said
Newport Coach Dan Glenn, whose Sailors defeated the Sea Kings in last
year’s four-game Division I championship match.
“Billy (Clayton, Harbor’s star senior outside hitter) is going to
Stanford with Kevin (Hansen, CdM’s All-CIF senior setter),” Glenn said.
“You don’t think the results of this match won’t be talked about every
day in practice the next four years?”
Even those who won’t share college destinations, at least share the same
community and, for many, the same Balboa Bay club affiliation.
Newport Harbor senior setter Kent Turner shared part of his high school
experience with his CdM rivals, having attended CdM as a freshman and
sophomore.
“I’ve known a lot of those guys since I was 2 years old,” Turner said.
Glenn believes the unique relationship between the schools, which,
despite no longer sharing the same league affiliation, played three
times this season -- all CdM victories -- creates a double-edged
challenge.
“Knowing a little about the opponent adds some comfort to it,” Glenn said
of tonight’s super-charged atmosphere. “But, it also adds some
competitiveness. Both teams want to win very badly.”
Hansen, playing in his fourth straight section title match (the Sea Kings
won a Division III crown in 1998), said getting the championship rematch
with Harbor is “a dream come true.”
“I wasn’t sure we’d get this second chance,” Hansen, whom CdM Coach Steve
Conti called the best setter in CIF, said.
“It’s a dream matchup,” said Newport senior middle blocker Dustin
Illingworth, who sat out his junior year. “It’s the perfect way to end
the season.”
CdM senior outside hitter Greg Stampley expressed disbelief about another
cross-town showdown, following Wednesday’s four-game semifinal triumph
over Santa Margarita.
“I never expected it to happen this way,” Stampley said. “(Conti) doesn’t
need to find a way to fire us up. We all want revenge for last year.”
The No. 3-seeded Sea Kings (21-1) have taken some satisfaction from three
victories over the Sailors (17-5) this season. CdM has won nine of the 11
games, including a four-game triumph in the regular-season finale May 5.
“But that means absolutely nothing, now,” Stampley said.
Conti also believes the three previous wins this year have done nothing
to wash away the bitter taste of Harbor’s 16-14, 12-15, 16-14, 15-3 win
in last year’s title match.
“This is a great chance for us to finish some business we didn’t quite
take care of last year,” Conti said. “These three wins have been nice,
but they don’t make up for last year.”
CdM senior Alec Hanson, who, along with Hansen, has also played in a
section title game in basketball, said the intensity at Cypress College
can be a distraction.
“Sometimes you get caught up in the crowd and the noise in that huge gym
and you forget what you’re there to do, which is win,” Hanson said.
“Sometimes, you have to calm yourself down.”
Both teams have played with poise in the postseason.
The Sea Kings, whose only loss came to Irvine March 15, less than a week
after Hansen, Hanson and fellow starter Charlie Alshuler joined the squad
from basketball, have won all but one game in four playoff matches.
The Pacific Coast League champions, who have won 19 straight best-of-five
matches, swept Capistrano Valley, Channel Islands and El Toro, before
being tested by Santa Margarita.
Newport Harbor, which has losses to Irvine, with which it shared the Sea
View League title, Santa Margarita and CdM, has survived an arduous
postseason road.
The Sailors swept Long Beach Poly, then prevailed in five-game thrillers
against San Clemente and top-seeded Marina. They swept Mira Costa in the
semifinals and, many believe, are playing their best volleyball.
“We’ve learned how to fight,” said Clayton, who has amassed 31, 43 and 27
kills the last three matches. “Our guys have a lot of desire to win. No
matter what happens, or what the deficit is, we’re going to keep working
to win.”
Illingworth agrees that Harbor is peaking and both he and Clayton believe
defense will be the key to getting over the top Saturday.
“Every time we’ve played them, we’ve done a little better and gotten a
little closer,” Clayton said. “If we make any mental mistakes, or beat
ourselves at all, we won’t have a chance. We’ll have to play our best
match to beat them.”
Said Illingworth: “We’re going to have to dig, dig, dig and just play
scrappy. The first three times we’ve played them, they outdug us. Whoever
plays the best defense will win.”
Despite the perfect record against the Tars thus far, CdM players are far
from overconfident.
“I wouldn’t say we’ve owned them,” Hansen said. “All the games have been
close. We know it’s tough to beat a team four times in one year, so we
are a little nervous.”
Hanson, though respectful of his opponent, has great faith in his
teammates.
“This team has a lot of will,” he said. “Greg, Kevin and I have been here
before and our philosophy is, we aren’t going to let a ball drop. We’re
very fundamentally sound when it comes to passing. We want to dig
everything.”
Glenn believes CdM has been the best team in the division all season. He
considers defense the Sea Kings’ biggest strength.
“One thing we have, going into this match, is, we’re used to everything
coming back over the net,” Glenn said. “Teams who haven’t played Corona
are surprised by how many balls, which are kills against other teams, are
dug by (the Sea Kings). We know there are balls Billy is going to pound,
that would hit the floor against other teams, which are going to come
back at us.
“They’re just so good at not making mistakes. And when you can keep the
ball in play, you have a better chance of winning. I told our guys after
the last CdM match that they were better than us at that point. But we’ve
had a couple weeks to get better and we have. I’m just excited to be
playing Corona again in the finals. We’ll have to play our best match to
win.”
While Clayton shoulders much of the hitting load, Turner has had success
spreading the ball to Illingworth in the middle, junior outside hitters
Blake Tippett and Brian Gaeta, and senior outside hitter Adam Tomalas.
Christian Berg-Hansen, a 6-foot-5 junior, starts at the other middle, in
place of senior Brad Craig, who injured his ankle against Marina.
Jimmy Sanders, Lloyd Wright, Greg Perrine and Erik Peterson have also
contributed along the playoff road for the Tars, who graduated five
starters from last year’s Division I champion.
“Both teams know each other real well and know what to expect,” Conti
said. “We know where their bread’s buttered and I’m sure they know where
our’s is, as well.
“I think the fourth, fifth and sixth players on each team will have a big
impact on how the match is decided. But I think it will come down to
three things: execution, who wants it the most and who can keep their
composure and not panic with the added pressure of a championship match.”
CdM, which, like Harbor, has played its entire roster most of the
campaign, counts on Stampley, Hanson, Mack and Alshuler to carry the
hitting load. Bryan Gallagher and Chris Shephardson have also been a
factor at the net, while Evan Burden, Garrett Macklin, Cedric Chun, John
Grod, and Ryan Inman have also contributed.
CdM, which has three section championships to show for its five previous
title-match appearances (1985, ’89 and ‘98), won at Harbor, 18-16, 15-7,
12-15, 15-12, on May 5.
The Sea Kings swept the Sailors, 15-13, 15-9, 15-10, in the Santa Barbara
Tournament of Champions final April 29 and also prevailed, 15-5, 13-15,
15-10, 15-9, in a nonleague match April 8 at CdM.
It’s also the sixth CIF title match for Harbor, which won section crowns
in 1979, ’87 and last spring.
A recent CIF rule change prohibiting teams from playing in playoff
divisions other than those they qualify by enrollment, which will take
effect next year, makes this the last Back Bay postseason showdown until
or unless the rule is changed.
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