Jillianne Whitfield
Steve Virgen
At Newport Harbor High, the Sailors have nicknamed their girls field
hockey team, “Chicks with Sticks,” a cute moniker, but it was just
another reason to make Jillianne Whitfield laugh.
Whitfield, a Newport Harbor senior, was skeptical, to say the
least, when she first encountered field hockey as a freshman.
“At first I never wanted to play field hockey,” said Whitfield,
whose sports of choice were basketball and soccer. “Looking at those
girls playing in skirts, I was thinking you would never catch me
playing that sport. But look at me now.”
Look at her now, indeed.
Whitfield has been the catalyst for the Sailors’ 13-1 start. Last week, she earned Most Valuable Player honors in leading Newport to
the Orange County Invitational championship.
And, if that wasn’t enough: Whitfield, the Daily Pilot Athlete of
the Week, has completed much of her success this season while playing
on a bad ankle, which has been heavily taped during games.
“It’s still bothering me,” Whitfield said Tuesday when she scored
two goals to lead the Sailors to a 3-0 win over Edison. “I just have
it taped up and I just go. I have tried to be sensible about it. I
know it will get better eventually.”
Whitfield had a premonition this season would be special, so she’s
not about to let a nagging injury stop her. Though she plays three
sports for Newport, she immediately turned her focus toward this
season when the Sailors lost in the Tournament of Champions for the
third straight year last fall.
Last year, Newport lost to Harvard-Westlake, 1-0, in a shootout,
and the previous two years, the Sailors won the Sunset League title
only to miss out on the season-ending Tournament of Champions crown.
“At the end of the season last year we were sitting there and we
had just lost in strokes,” Whitfield said. “The first thing that came
to my mind was that I’m not going to take this anymore. We knew
[winning the TOC] would be our main goal this season.”
Whitfield, who has played basketball and competed in track and
field at Newport, was involved with the off-season Futures program,
the club-type system that specializes in developing field hockey
players, February through May. It was her second year in the program.
“I seriously think I have gained an advantage by doing that
program,” Whitfield said. “
In June, Whitfield was scouted by college coaches while attempting
to qualify for California’s team that would compete in the National
Futures Tournament in Virginia Beach, and she was selected.
“I had so much fun,” said Whitfield, who plans to play field
hockey in college next year. “We got to play a lot of games on turf.
I really love turf. It was so hot and humid in the middle of July,
but it was a lot of fun.”
From her efforts in the tournament, Whitfield earned a spot on the
Futures Elite squad, a team that is just below two groups that are
for selection purposes for the Olympic women’s team. Whitfield was
picked out 250 girls at the national tournament and she will have the
choice of playing in Holland or Australia in July.
“I think I want to go to Australia,” Whitfield said.
Before that happens Whitfield wants to lead the Sailors to a
Sunset League championship and a TOC title.
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