Girls basketball: Harbor smiling again
Richard Dunn
NEWPORT BEACH - Since the glory years under former coach Shannon
Jakosky, the Newport Harbor High girls basketball program has undergone
more changes at the top than a busy Jiffy Lube.
But Jen Thompson, making her debut as a varsity head coach, is taking
aim at details like education first and having fun second, while, above
all, sticking around awhile.
“That’s the first question they asked me when (Newport) hired me at
the end of June,” Thompson said of her players. “‘Are you going to be
here more than one year?’ I’ve heard (the Sailors) have had a new coach
every year, that there has been no stability.”
Thompson, the Sailors’ sixth coach in the last five seasons, isn’t
saying the team will return to the CIF Southern Section divisional and
Southern California Regional finals at the Arrowhead Pond, where
Jakosky’s squad played in ‘94, before the program started to go in
another direction.
But Thompson is promising more smiles than last year, when the Sailors
finished 2-22 (they were 4-23 the year before that).
“They look like they’re having fun, and they’re smiling,” Thompson
said. “In the games I went to last year, they weren’t.”
Furthermore, Thompson said the players seem happier because of
additional offensive plays, and, with more options, perhaps the team’s
four returning starters can parlay their experience into a campaign that
includes a Sea View League win. Newport Harbor has dropped 16 consecutive
league games heading into 2001-02.
However, with a new attitude instilled by their coach, the former Jen
Nakanishi of Culver City High who set a CIF Southern Section career
three-point record (277), the Sailors are believing in positive things to
come.
“We’re going to run,” said Thompson, who coached the lower levels at
Woodbridge High for a couple of years, before landing at Newport last
spring as an assistant coach and shortly thereafter being asked to accept
the head coaching position (replacing Glenn Albios).
“I noticed last year (the Sailors) slowed up and got in trouble when
there was a press, and then got in trouble when they tried getting the
ball to half court. But we’re going to run. Our offense is a running
offense and they’re all in shape.”
Thompson, a three-time All-CIF selection and former Cal Poly Pomona
standout, inherits a young team with only one senior, 5-foot-10 Avita
Castillo, who averaged 8.5 points per game last season.
“(Castillo) has height and the athletic ability to jump,” Thompson
said. “She can play both (guard and forward).”
Junior Lindsey Woller, a 6-foot center who started part-time last
year, 5-5 junior point guard Athena Vasquez and 5-7 sophomore Jillianne
Whitfield were also regulars in the lineup last season.
Junior Amanda Campbell, 5-9, contributed off the bench last year and
will work into the starting rotation this season.
“I’ve seen a lot of improvement in the players,” Thompson said. “Even
in the summer, when we played in the Costa Mesa (Tournament) in July, the
coaches were saying how much the team had improved.”
Newport Harbor, which hasn’t experienced great success since playing
in the CIF Division III-AA and Southern California Regional championship
games seven years ago, opens its season with high hopes Tuesday at 7 p.m.
in a nonleague game at Fountain Valley.
“I expect them to give 100% all the time while on the court and off
the court,” said Thompson, referring to a focus on academics.
With Harbor’s returning crew intact, several newcomers provide the
Sailors with more height, led by 5-8 forwards Alexis Kerns, a sophomore,
and Tina Fulce, a junior. Both are up from the junior varsity.
Sophomore guards Ally Stoltz, 5-5, and Victoria Swigart, 5-7, are also
up from JV.
Junior Kelly Rangel, 5-5, and freshman guard Vanessa Miller, 5-6, are
also new to the team, as is 5-7 junior Tiffany Linsday, who suffered a
broken foot about six weeks ago in a car accident and could be lost for
the season.
“She’s hoping to be back this season,” Thompson said of Linsday, who
had two screws placed in her foot, “but I told her you need to let this
heal. I know how she feels. I had two screws in my knee (in college) and
had to sit on the sidelines. It’s tough when you can’t do anything.”
Newport Harbor is scheduled to play in the University Tournament
starting Dec. 1.
NEWPORT HARBOR GIRLS10 Amanda Campbell, Jr.
11 Alexis Kerns, So.
12 Victoria Swigart, So.
15 Ally Stoltz, So.
21 Jillianne Whitfield, So.
22 Vanessa Miller, Fr.
23 Avita Castillo, Sr.
24 Athena Vasquez, Jr.
32 Tina Fulce, Jr.
34 Kelly Rangel, Jr.
42 Lindsey Woller, Jr.
44 Tiffany Linsday, Jr.
Coach: Jen Thompson
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