Prep releaguing: Wish lists gain support
Barry Faulkner
FOUNTAIN VALLEY - Orange County releaguing for the four-year
athletic cycle beginning the fall of 2002, moved one step closer to
completion Wednesday and four Newport-Mesa District high schools are all
pleased with the direction things are headed.
Representatives from 62 of the 63 schools in the Orange County Area
discussed 15 initial proposals, then voted to pare them down to the top
10. The top three all had the fingerprints of Newport-Mesa principals and
each would move Costa Mesa and Estancia from the Pacific Coast League to
the Golden West, while leaving Corona del Mar in the PCL and Newport
Harbor in the Sea View.
The top vote-getter, a plan produced by the Sea View League, received
38 votes, just four shy of the maximum two-thirds majority needed for a
proposal to be forwarded to the CIF Southern Section for final approval.
Proposals generated by Estancia (30 votes) and Costa Mesa (24) also
finished in the top three at the near-three-hour meeting at Fountain
Valley High.
These top 10 proposals, plus counterproposals submitted to league
representatives before Tuesday, will be discussed and voted upon at a
Feb. 15 meeting. Should one proposal gain the necessary two-thirds
majority, it would be submitted for section approval. If no proposal
gains the necessary consensus Feb. 15, another meeting would be held Feb.
27 to produce a final proposal.
The Sea View League proposal, presented by Irvine Principal Gail
Richards, would place Costa Mesa and Estancia in the Golden West League,
with incumbents Ocean View, Saddleback, Santa Ana and Westminster, as
well as Orange, which would shift from the Century League.
The PCL would consist of CdM, Laguna Beach, Northwood and University,
as well as Calvary Chapel and new schools Tesoro, based in unincorporated
area near Rancho Santa Margarita, and Tustin-based Beckman.
The Sea View League would add Foothill, from the Century, to current
members Newport Harbor, Aliso Niguel, Irvine, Laguna Hills and
Woodbridge.
The only difference between the Sea View and Estancia proposals is the
placement of Orange High. The Sea View plan would shift Orange from the
Century to the Golden West, while the Estancia version would place Orange
in the Orange League.
Only Century High, which would prefer a move to the Orange League,
rather than the Century League, voiced opposition to the Sea View and
Estancia presentations Wednesday.
Santa Ana High Principal Dan Salcedo, however, said he would prefer
the Golden West League avoid the scheduling difficulties created by a
seven-team league (as per the Sea View plan).
Costa Mesa’s proposal would add Orange to the existing seven-team
Garden Grove League, which has consistently asked to remain intact, since
all schools are in the Garden Grove Unified District.
Katella Principal Marsha Wagner also spoke against the Costa Mesa
proposal, because it would place Orange Lutheran, which she said recruits
students from her school’s attendance area, with Katella in the Empire
League.
A plan presented by Buena Park was the only proposal among the top 10,
that would make Newport-Mesa schools unhappy. The proposal, which drew 11
votes to place fifth, would keep Costa Mesa and Estancia in the PCL,
shift CdM from the PCL to the Sea View, and move Newport Harbor from the
Sea View to the Sunset.
Estancia Principal Tom Antal said he was gratified that his proposal
received so much support.
“It feels nice,†said Antal, participating in his first releaguing
process. “(The proposal) was the result of a lot of phone calls and
conversations with folks throughout the county.â€
Though the top three proposals would all create a seven-team PCL,
Beckman, tentatively scheduled to open the fall of 2003, would not field
varsity teams until at least the final two years of the cycle.
Tesoro, scheduled to open next fall with freshmen and sophomores,
could offer varsity competition beginning the fall of 2002, but would not
have seniors competing until the second year of the cycle.
Additionally, Richards suggested the scheduling difficulties created
by a seven-team PCL, could be lessened with cooperative cross-scheduling
by another seven-team league, such as the Garden Grove.
Only three of the 15 initial proposals reflected Esperanza’s request
to leave the Sunset League, Only two of those, the aforementioned Buena
Park configuration, as well as an Edison proposal, which tied for eighth
with eight votes, received support.
Should Esperanza’s desire to leave the Sunset League, based on
concerns about excessive travel time to schools within that circuit, gain
favor, Newport Harbor could move to the Sunset to replace it. This now
appears unlikely.
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