Second chances
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Mike Sciacca
Everybody loves to get a second chance.
For the Edison High girls’ basketball team, tonight, as well as
the coming week, will offer up a couple of second chance situations.
The Chargers find themselves in a three-way tie for first place in
the Sunset League standings but will get the chance tonight to emerge
as a front-runner in the race for first-place when they host
Esperanza.
The game also affords Edison the chance to exact revenge against
the two-time defending league champion Aztecs who edged the Chargers,
39-36, back on Jan. 9 -- the opening night of the 2003 Sunset League
season.
The start of the second half of league play will officially tip
off tonight at 7 p.m.
“We’re excited to get another crack at Esperanza, and play them on
our home court, too,” Edison coach Corey Kelly said. “We have some
pretty good teams bunched up at the top of the league standings, and
this game will determine which of these two teams gains the upper
hand the rest of the season.”
Edison, Esperanza and Los Alamitos share the league lead, each
with a 4-1 record.
Esperanza and Los Alamitos were considered to be favorites for the
league crown before Sunset play began in early January, and Edison
was tabbed for third-place.
The Chargers have won four straight since dropping that first
meeting with Esperanza. The win streak includes a victory last
Saturday over Los Alamitos, which was the Griffins’ initial league
loss.
Edison, which has gone 15-5 overall against a difficult schedule,
has bolted to a share of the league lead by peaking “at the right
time,” said Kelly.
They’ve done it behind some outstanding play coming from sophomore
Rebecca Kepilino, junior point guard Valerie Katayama and senior
Leila Abufarie.
Kepilino averaged 15 points and seven rebounds per game before the
start of league play, but during the first half of the Sunset race,
she upped her averages to 18 points and 10 rebounds.
Katayama has been averaging nearly double figures in scoring and
Abufarie, a transfer from Ocean View, is getting back to her
“old-self” after sitting out a season while recovering from a knee
injury, Kelly said.
“We have had our struggles but our entire team is beginning to get
on the same page,” he said. “Rebecca is just a heck of a player. She
plays at every position at some point in every game and, from what
I’ve seen, I feel she’s one of the top sophomores in the state.
“Valerie is our captain and plays every minute of every game.
She’s not the biggest player out on the court but she’s probably the
toughest player on our team. And Leila, well, she’s battled through
her injury and has been big for us in league. She’s really stepped up
her game.”
Abufarie isn’t the only transfer whose services figure to give the
Edison lineup a potent infusion.
Another transfer waiting to get her chance to play is junior Eva
Camarena who comes to Edison from Westminster High.
Camarena played varsity ball as a freshman at Westminster and was
an all-league player. Due to certain circumstances, she ended up
quitting the team and had difficulties in school.
She ended up transferring to Edison and got a second chance when
she joined the Charger basketball family.
Camarena, who practices with the team and sits with the coaches on
the Edison bench on game night, was ineligible to play at the start
of the 2002-03 season. But last week marked the end of the semester
at Edison and Camarena, Kelly said, attained the grades needed to
gain her playing eligibility.
She can’t suit up until grades are officially recorded with the
Huntington Beach Union High School District, and that could come
sometime in the next 7-10 days. That means she could play in the
final three or four league games, as well as the postseason.
“I’ve very excited to get this chance,” she said. “A lot of people
doubted that I could become eligible to play, so I’m really proud of
my accomplishments. I want to help the team out any way I can, and
I’d like to be a part of a championship team.”
Kelly said that Camarena’s comeback extends beyond the basketball
court.
“I’m just so proud of her and the changes she has made in her
life,” he said. “I’m more happy for her in terms of the changes for
the better in both school and her personal life, in general. We took
her in and really helped her get things in order.
“The bonus is that Eva is a terrific basketball player who can
make great contributions to our team. She’s just happy to have this
chance, and so are we.”
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports and features. He can be reached at
(714) 965-7171 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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