Shadowlands
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Looking back, 5 years ago this week.
Six former Newport Harbor High Sailors are competing for four-year
colleges in 1996. Former Newport-Mesa District Defensive Player of the
Year Steve Gonzales opens his major-college career at the University of
Hawaii. Punters Doug Stuckey (Oregon State) and Gregg Kaiser (UTEP) are
also displaying their talents for Division I-A programs. Linebackers Matt
Burns (Wagner College) and Dan McDonough (St. Mary’s College), as well as
quarterback Ryan Smith (Claremont-Mudd-Scripps) round out the contingent
of Tars playing at four year schools.
The 19996 Paralympics in Atlanta is a bittersweet time for longtime
Newport Beach resident Dr. John Ross-Duggan. He comes away with a bronze
medal at the Games, which brings together the world’s best handicapped
athletes. Ross-Duggan, a 41-year-old neuroradiologist, is paralyzed from
about the bottom of his rib cage down since a 1978 auto accident. His
condition, known as C-7 quadriplegia does not stop him from becoming the
most skilled sailor with the highest degree of disability in the world.
Besides taking the bronze, Ross-Duggan also claims the National
Championships in Chicago on Aug. 2 -- his 41st birthday. Those are the
high points of a month that also claims the life of his mother, Gay
Thomas Henderson. She dies from a rare blood disease while Ross-Duggan
was competing in Atlanta.
The Xtreme, an under-17 soccer team made up of mostly local girls from
AYSO Region 97, win the Arsenal Tournament championship in London,
England. They advance to the championship match in one of the hotbeds of
world futbol and defeat the hometown heroes, Chelsea, for the prestigious
Arsenal Cup. After battling to a 1-1 tie, the Xtreme claim the trophy by
winning an exciting shootout, 4-3. Derek Lawther, former coach of Corona
del Mar High boys soccer, coaches the Xtreme. Team members include Sasha
Ritter, Bonnie Watson, Ginny Warmington, Sabrina Tweedy, Piper Phillips
and Jenny Humphrey.
Looking back, 10 years ago this week.
Danny O’Neil, a Corona del Mar High product, wins the much publicized
starting quarterback job at the University of Oregon. “It’s nice not to
have to worry about the competition any more,” says O’Neil, who is
awarded the job the same day his chief rival Brett Salisbury suffers a
hernia in practice. “I was No. 1 after spring and never lost the No. 1
spot this fall. It was limited to two quarterbacks and I was still No. 1
when Salisbury got hurt.” O’Neil, a 6-foot-2, 175-pound redshirt freshman
starts for the Ducks when Washington State visits Eugene in the
season-opener for both schools.
Jeff Gardner, an Estancia High product, is called up to the major
leagues by the parent club, the New York Mets. Gardner, who is batting
.291 for Tidewater in triple A circles, closes out the season with
Tidewater during the week, then reports to the Mets before they host the
Atlanta Braves. It is the first call to the majors for the 27-year-old
Gardner after a seven-year run in the minors.
Despite a valiant performance in a semifinal, the United States is not
able to compete for any medals in the Junior World Water Polo
Championships. The U.S., featuring Corona del Mar product Chris Oeding,
uses a strong defensive effort in the second half against Bulgaria to
cruise to a 14-8 victory, temporarily keeping their hopes of winning a
medal alive. To qualify for the medal round, the Americans must win their
game by more than five goals and for a Hungary victory over Spain. They
win by six, but all joy turns into horror as the U.S. stands by and
watches Spain defeat the previously undefeated and heavily favored
Hungarians. Oeding notches three goals in a 13-4 win over Japan, earlier
in the week.
-- compiled by Steve Virgen
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