BOYS' BASKETBALL DIVISION IV : Coronado Title Defeats Imperial, Stereotype - Los Angeles Times
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BOYS’ BASKETBALL DIVISION IV : Coronado Title Defeats Imperial, Stereotype

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Hey, all you water polo and tennis players, listen up. The Coronado boys’ basketball team won the Division IV San Diego Section championship Friday with a 63-53 victory over Imperial at Golden Hall.

Nyah-nyah nyah nyah-nyah nyah.

“We’re stereotyped as a tennis and water polo school,†said 6-foot-3 center Derek Wastila, who scored 19 points. “Little do they know we have some talent out here.â€

Enough, in fact, to win the school’s first section basketball championship. This team also won Coronado’s first league championship since 1963, finishing atop the newly formed City Harbor League.

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“All they hear is tennis and water polo,†Coronado Coach Bob Stanton said. “But we’ve beaten some pretty good teams this year. This wasn’t a fluke.â€

Still, people have been telling guard Paul Carter for years that he should transfer to a real basketball school. He didn’t listen.

“I stuck it out for four years,†he said. “And I’m pretty satisfied with my career here.â€

Carter ended it with an exclamation point, scoring nine points and assisting his teammates on a rather amazing accomplishment in the third quarter, when Coronado (19-8) outscored Imperial 18-2. Imperial, which used a balanced offense to build a 33-29 halftime lead, managed only a pair of free throws in the third quarter. Forward Brian Williams’ half-court prayer at the conclusion of the period, which bounced around the rim and out, was the closest thing Imperial had to a field goal.

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“I think their size and strength wore us down a little,†Imperial Coach Kerry Legarra said. “We just quit moving and maybe that was because of fatigue.â€

If Imperial (16-8) was tired, it wasn’t extinct. Trailing, 47-35, at the end of the third quarter, the Tigers trimmed Coronado’s lead to eight with less than three minutes remaining. Then, when Imperial forward Erik Mellas drove for a layup, Wastila swatted Mellas’ shot halfway to Orange County, and Carter wound up with a layup on the other end.

“I do tend to feast on the smaller teams,†Wastila said.

A basket and three free throws down the stretch by forward Adam Smith, who scored 19 points to share game-high honors with Wastila, helped preserve the victory, Coronado’s second over Imperial this season.

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One key to this victory was Stanton’s decision to change the defense in the third quarter from a box-and-one, designed to shut down forward/center Brian Williams, to a two-three zone. Williams managed just nine points, and the defensive switch threw Imperial’s offense out of kilter.

“A lot of their shots came easy,†Legarra said. “And a lot of ours came very, very hard.â€

But Legarra wasn’t completely dissatisfied.

“How many teams,†he asked, “score two points in one quarter and are still in the ball game?â€

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