Artie Dorr
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Steve Virgen
Champions find success because they constantly create challenges.
Such is the case for Corona del Mar High senior Artie Dorr, the
backbone, if you will, of the Sea Kings’ boys water polo team.
After three years of helping the Sea Kings to CIF Division II
titles, Dorr found just the right challenge for this season.
He wants the CdM squad to win a fourth straight title, but this
time in CIF Division I.
“He’s always been a great player,” Sea King Coach Tim Salvino said
of Dorr. “He’s stepped it up this year. (His work ethic has always)
been good and it’s gotten better. He’s in Division I now, and I think
he wants to show that we never should have moved down (to Division
II).”
Dorr’s desire for a fourth straight CIF title was displayed at
last week’s NorCal Invitational at Bellarmine Prep, where the Daily
Pilot Athlete of the Week delivered a blue-collar type performance.
Dorr, mainly one of two primary targets on offense, concentrated on
defense throughout the tournament and led the Sea Kings to a
third-place showing. Perhaps, even more important, CdM defeated
Harvard-Westlake, 12-10, in the third-place game, which provided a
very high degree of confidence for the Sea Kings.
“To come out and beat those guys was huge,” Dorr said of the win
over Harvard-Westlake, which is ranked No. 3 in CIF Division I. “It
helped us, and helped our confidence. That game was really physical.
It was just a fight and a battle. When we won we felt like we had
grown a lot closer.”
Dorr knows the key to a championship team. It’s chemistry, and
that’s what he and the other handful of seniors, including John Mann
and Beau Stockstill, are trying to build.
“There is diversity on this team,” Dorr said of the Sea Kings, who
are ranked No. 2 in CIF Division I. “I think we are growing a lot.
Last year, we were solid all the way through. This year it has been
awesome to see us grow. We have really grown as a team.”
Throughout the Sea Kings’ growth, Dorr has also developed his
versatility, even more than last year, when he earned Pacific Coast
League Co-MVP and CIF Division II Co-Player of the Year honors. This
season, Dorr has improved on his outside shot and his defense. Both
features have brought more power to the CdM 1-2 punch that is Dorr
and Mann, who shared last year’s PCL MVP.
“He’s one of the senior leaders,” Salvino said. “His leadership
style is not in the traditional sense, not the vocal or the rah-rah
type, but as an example. He’s always grinding away and never says a
word, but gets the job done.”
That’s exactly what Dorr did at the NorCal Invitational, where he
scored eight goals in four games. He scored four goals, handed out
one assist and collected one steal in the Sea Kings’ 13-2 victory
over Davis. In addition, he scored one goal and had three assists in
leading CdM to the 12-10 win over Harvard-Westlake. In that game,
Dorr mainly played defense on Harvard-Westlake senior Marty Matthies,
a U.S. Junior National Team member.
“He was placed in the role of being matched on defense with the
key player on their team,” Salvino said of Dorr’s role in the
tournament. “He put his offensive production secondary to his
defensive role in order to take the other guy out. He was incredibly
consistent in his defense.”
Dorr’s versatility along with his consistent ability to score will
be the main reasons he will move on to play for a Division I college
program next year. Dorr said he will stay on the West Coast, and he
will make his decision after the season is over, most likely after
January. He will most likely stay in California, as UCLA, Pepperdine,
USC, Loyola Marymount and UC San Diego have shown interest in him.
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