Building a foundation
Bryce Alderton
With the improvement showcased by some of the girls sports teams at
Sage Hill School this past year, Athletic Director Nate Miller’s
vision for added facilities might have to come to fruition sooner
than expected.
CIF playoff appearances by the tennis, softball and basketball
teams highlighted the year in girls sports at the Newport Coast
private school, which will go on its fourth year of existence when
school resumes in the fall.
The tennis team, coached by A.G. Longoria, a teaching professional
at Mission Viejo Country Club, finished 13-3, 10-2 in the Academy
League, good for second place. The Lightning went 2-1, advancing to
the CIF Southern Section Division V quarterfinals.
Freshman Katie McKitterick won 53 of 57 singles sets and advanced
to the semifinals of the league tournament. The three-sport star
earned first-team All-Academy honors in tennis and was named the
school’s Girls Athlete of the Year.
McKitterick was an outfielder on Sage’s softball team, which lost
a wild-card playoff game to Western Christian and finished the season
10-10 under first-year Coach Jim Percival. The Lightning won nine
more games than the previous year. Jessica Torina represented the
Lightning on the All-Academy first-team.
Shanna Renkin led the Lightning’s girls basketball team to its
first CIF playoff appearance in the program’s second year of
existence. Sage finished 13-8, losing in the first round to Connelly
in the first round of the CIF Division IV-A playoffs. Freshman center
Haywood Wright earned first-team all-league honors.
Both softball and tennis teams practice and play at off-campus
sites. Miller would like to have as many teams as possible on campus,
but realizes there is only so much space and money.
“The new academic building supercedes everything else,” Miller
said about the structure the school hopes to add in two to three
years. “Once that is underway, maybe we can add some tennis courts.”
Sage tennis practices and plays at Park Newport while softball
uses a field on the corner of San Joaquin Hills Road and Newport
Coast. Sage’s water polo team plays its games at night at Corona del
Mar High.
“It is a challenge to be off-campus,” Miller said. “Some sports
like golf and track will always be off-campus. It all depends on how
successful we are in raising money for the school. It is not a
perfect scenario right now, but it is an agreeable one.”
This year, 33 seniors graduated from a student body of 350.
That leaves many players eligible to return next year, adding to
Miller’s optimism.
“Our girls teams were very good with the freshmen they had, which
should add to their strength,” he said. “In tennis we have three
strong freshman girls coming back and there are a number of eighth
graders who are interested in joining the program. I think softball
lost only one player and volleyball was a very young team that will
improve.”
Girls volleyball went 4-8, including a 3-7 record in league, good
for fifth place. Sophia Hillgren gained second-team all-league
honors.
Water polo finished 10-8, while soccer took fifth place in league.
Amy Werblin and Laura Gordon earned first-team all-league laurels in
soccer. Swimming finished 3-6 while golf ended last season, 2-13, 1-9
in league. Senior April Kim made the All-Academy first team after she
finished second in the Golden West League finals. Gordon also shined
for Sage’s track team, winning the 300 meters and triple jump at the
league finals.
Both track and cross country feature several young athletes
Miller, who coaches both sports in addition to teaching a calculus
class, hopes will improve with time.
In five years, Miller, who has been at the school since it opened
in 2000, expects enrollment to be around 500.
That figure is still significantly less than most public schools
boast, giving kids that want to play sports a chance, Miller said.
“Most [people thinking about attending Sage] want to know if they
have not had too much experience, could they make a team,” Miller
said. “A few teams have tryouts and cuts. The kids from many
different areas makes us unique as well.”
Last year, Sage’s freshman class equaled 120, with students coming
from 45 different schools.
Miller, 33, came to Sage after spending seven years as an
assistant athletic director for Lake Forest Academy in Illinois.
Even though he only taught one class last year, Miller treats that
time as gold.
“Keeping that classroom connection with kids is important,” Miller
said.
Most of Miller’s day is spent by scheduling matches and games,
overseeing equipment and facility needs and securing off-campus
sites.
“It is not one or two duties, but rather eight to 10 multiple
tasks,” Miller said. “Fifty percent of the job is dealing with things
that come up, trying to find immediate solutions.”
Building a winning athletic department is hardly an immediate
undertaking, but Miller, a Corona del Mar resident, realizes the
foundation is set.
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