Sea Kings seeking upgrade
Rick Devereux
Matt Flesher may be a first-year head coach, but the 24-year-old is
already familiar with members of his Corona del Mar High boys swim
team.
Flesher was an assistant for the boys water polo team that
finished 20-9.
“I know these guys,” Flesher said of the swim team. “They are a
great bunch of kids.”
Flesher will be looking to have the same kind of turnaround season
in boys swimming as the water polo team enjoyed.
One CdM swimmer, Bryan Buhagiar in the 100-yard backstroke,
qualified for the CIF Southern Section Division II championships at
Belmont Plaza in Long Beach last year.
The water polo team went from 8-19 in 2003 to the CIF Division I
semifinals last fall.
Flesher is expecting Buhagiar, a junior, as well as other
returners to help guide the turnaround.
“I’m not sure what guys are what strokes, but the core guys are
Buhagiar, [senior] Tom Money, [junior] Kyle Hersh and [junior] Jacob
Murphy,” Flesher said. “Those are guys I’m sure will be swimming in
[the CIF championships]. I’m counting on them to be the leaders of
the team.”
The water polo background naturally leads to high expectations in
the freestyle sprints.
Money, Murphy and Hersh are all expected to compete in the 100 and
200 freestyle events with freshman Chris Cottrell also figuring into
the mix. That foursome is also being considered for the 200 and 400
free relay teams.
“We have a very good sprint team,” Flesher said. “But a water polo
coach wants you to get from point A to point B as fast as you can, no
matter how you do it. In swimming, it’s all about the mechanics. All
of the little things are important when you’re talking about a
fraction of a second.”
While it seems the freestyle events will carry CdM, Flesher said
it will be the intangibles that may lift the Sea Kings from a
fourth-place finish in the five-team Pacific Coast League a year ago
to elite status on par with the girls program that was the CIF
Division II champion last year and runner-up the year before.
“Our strength is our camaraderie,” Flesher said. “There is a very
good team element on the pool deck. All of the guys are friends and
push each other in workouts.”
Even more than winning times, Flesher said he is interested in
seeing the swimmers progressively improve.
“I like to see these guys work hard because I’m a big fan of being
competitive,” he said. “Track and field and swimming are unique in
that you are racing against yourself and the clock. It is truly an
environment where you get out what you put into it.”
While Flesher admits he doesn’t know how the team performed last
year, he is aware of the history of Corona del Mar aquatics.
“I know this is a great community with great facilities and the
guys are excited about training and swimming,” he said. “I know there
is a very good tradition at CdM. But I also know the last couple of
years, swimming was not taken seriously. I am looking to instill into
the program the notion that this is a varsity sport. This isn’t
recreational swimming at the local YMCA.”
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