Prep column: Pursuing perfect ending
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Barry Faulkner
Corona del Mar High boys water polo coach John Vargas doesn’t think
in these terms, at least for public consumption, and he’d probably
appreciate it if his players also abstained. But there are aspirations
within the Sea Kings program for an unbeaten season this fall.
Such an accomplishment, which would include the program’s third
straight CIF Southern Section championship, would be a first for the
storied water polo program Vargas has helped maintain since he took over
as a 21-year-old head coach in 1983. The Sea Kings have won six of their
11 CIF championships during Vargas’ first 18 seasons, which have also
included four CIF runner-up finishes.
“There was one other team that was undefeated heading into the CIF
title game, but they lost,” CdM senior driver Bobby Messenger said.
Messenger, who helped the Sea Kings win their first South Coast
Tournament title in seven years with an 8-6 triumph over The Bishop’s
from La Jolla in Saturday’s title game at Newport Harbor High, said part
of the players’ motivation for success this season is to send Vargas off
to Stanford with a special memory.
“We really want a perfect season as a gift for Coach Vargas,”
Messenger said. “There is so much respect for him in the water polo
community. You almost have to come out and get into the water to realize
how good a coach he really is. He knows everything there is to know about
water polo.”
Vargas, who played on two U.S. Olympic teams and coached the American
squad at the Sydney Olympics in 2000, will leave CdM after the current
boys season to take over as men’s coach at Stanford.
“I don’t know what people expect, but I think we’re on track,” Vargas
said after his team improved to 5-0 with Saturday’s win.
Vargas denied any talk of running the table this season.
“That’s nothing we focus on,” he said. “Our approach has always been
the same. We want the kids to perform well, play within the system, do
well in league to set ourselves up for a good seeding in CIF, and make a
run at the (Southern Section) title.”
Vargas acknowledges the competition at two remaining regular-season
tournaments, the SoCal Invitational Oct. 5-6 in Irvine and the Cal State
Invitational, Oct. 26-27 at Stanford, should provide ample competition to
occupy his players’ short-term attention.
Perfect season aside, Vargas admits a third straight section crown, a
feat Vargas has already pulled off (1987-89) would be a fitting way to
complete his career at CdM.
“There would be no better way to go out,” Vargas said.
Turns out, the varsity football debut for Sage Hill High will have to
wait until next season.
Lightning Coach Tom Monarch, who had scheduled what he thought was two
varsity games to go with the six junior varsity contests this fall, will
have to consider those two games against varsity opponents as junior
varsity games, as well, according to CIF Southern Section officials.
Southern Section Assistant Commissioner Rob Wigod, who administrates
football, said schools need to file a varsity schedule for inclusion in
the section’s master schedule to be considered a varsity team. Since Sage
Hill did not, it is considered a junior varsity team, which, by all
accounts, it should be anyway this season.
Consulting the master schedule, however, can sometimes add to the
confusion, particularly when small schools are involved.
Saddleback Valley Christian, which Sage Hill played Friday, has games
with junior varsity teams listed on its schedule, with “(JV)” next to the
school’s name.
That designation, however, does not appear next to the Sage Hill
listing. Further, Saddleback Valley’s game with California School for the
Deaf in Riverside, originally scheduled for October but contested
Thursday night as a varsity game, hours before the Sage Hill JV game, is
listed with the JV designation on the Warriors’ schedule.
Saddleback Valley Christian is also scheduled to meet St. Margaret’s
in a varsity game Sept. 28, then play the St. Margaret’s JV to conclude
its regular season Nov. 7. Hmmm.
Among the estimated 7,000 who took in Friday’s Battle of the Bay XL,
was Fox Sports Net broadcaster Bill Macdonald, one of CdM’s more famous
alumni.
Macdonald, joking during the third quarter with Cox Cable
sportscasters on hand broadcasting the game to parts of South Orange
County, wondered aloud what had gone wrong with his Sea Kings, down,
34-0, at the time.
“I think I still have some eligibility left for football,” Macdonald
quipped.
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