Seaborn to spearhead trio of Sea King guards
Patrick Laverty
Corona del Mar High boys basketball coach Ryan Curry may not have a
lot of size, but he has one thing that every basketball coach wants.
“We have good, experienced guards,” Curry said.
The Sea Kings have three of them, all returning starters, two of
whom will be starting for the third straight season and those guards
will carry a lot of the hopes of a Corona del Mar team that will
attempt to better its third-place finish in the Pacific Coast League
of a year ago.
Leading the charge will be 6-foot-3 senior Pancho Seaborn, CdM’s
leading scorer from last season, 12.2 points per game, and the team’s
best defensive player for three years running, Curry said.
Another three-year starter, 5-8 senior Jay Northridge, will join
him in CdM’s three-guard system. He averaged 8.1 points last year and
made 35 three-pointers, numbers expected to increase as he shares the
point guard duties with the third of CdM’s experienced guards, 5-10
senior Adam Freede.
Curry and Freede will both start and both be the primary ball
handlers. Curry thought Northridge gave the ball up too much last
season, so by sharing the point guard position, he will have more of
an opportunity to look for his shot.
Combined the three guards will lead a guard-oriented team that
will attempt to pick up the pace in order to make up for its lack of
size.
“I thought the last couple years we hid out in a zone. We were
undersized and overmatched,” Curry said. “We’re going to try to pick
up the pace, shoot in transition.”
Aiding in that effort will be sophomore Ryan Lance, who averaged
nearly 20 points per game on the freshman team last season and joins
his older brother, junior Tyler, on the team.
Another pair of brothers, twins Kevin Welch and Tom Welch, add a
wealth of athleticism. Kevin was the MVP of CdM’s junior varsity team
last season, which won the league championship.
Two other returners from last season’s varsity team, seniors Reid
Wantabe and Taylor MacDonald are expected to provide quality minutes.
“We’ll try to use our quickness,” Curry said. “We might struggle
with our interior defense, but we’ll have the advantage on the
perimeter. We’ll have five guys out there who can shoot and
penetrate.”
Curry considers University “the hands-down favorite” in the
Pacific Coast League this season, with Northwood not too far behind.
CdM hasn’t been able to beat University in either of the past two
years and Curry said beating Uni and Northwood will be key to moving
up the PCL standings.
“If you win out at home and split on the road, you’re in the upper
echelon,” Curry said.
The Sea Kings will open the season Friday at Back Bay rival
Newport Harbor. They will also be tested at the La Quinta, Arroyo
Grande and Estancia tournaments, where CdM will attempt to establish
itself as a team that forces mistakes and capitalizes on them.
“We’re going to have to rebound and find cheap baskets,” Curry
said. “We need to create easy opportunities. I’d like to see us score
six, 10, 12 cheap points a game.”
Those will make up for what the Sea Kings lack in size with
Seaborn and 6-4 senior Joe Kabaklian the team’s tallest players.
While height may be lacking, there are plenty of other things for
Curry to like entering the season.
“I like our attitude,” Curry said. “I like our work ethic. We’re
all excited and we’re entering the season with expectations. Now it’s
up to the coaching staff and the players to get things done.”
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