Paper chase begins
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In the age of instant information technology and world-wide
interfacing, it has, somehow, become more and more difficult to keep
track of the prep sports scene that envelopes Newport-Mesa schools.
As the new year unveils the beginning of league competition for
winter sports, including boys and girls basketball and boys and girls
soccer, I’m asked to start constructing some context around this
competition, as it relates to Newport-Mesa teams.
In recent years, before the advent of Sage Hill and releaguing,
that meant compiling, processing and analyzing information involving
two leagues. It was a comprehensive, yet largely manageable task.
But, the days of having three schools in a six-school Pacific
Coast League, along with following Newport Harbor in the five-school
Sea View League, are, I lament, as passe as the video cassette.
Now, breaking down the projected fortunes of boys and girls
basketball teams alone, involves five local schools, four leagues,
with a combined 25 schools, for each gender. Even the unique benefit
of having more than one local school in the same league (Costa Mesa
and Estancia reside in the Golden West League), is eroded by having
five additional schools in the same circuit, all of which will
require time to build working relationships and familiarity with.
My task has also has been compounded by the continuing dilution of
high school sports coverage by Orange County’s two biggest
newspapers, which used to fill gaps in league coverage that spilled
outside Newport-Mesa.
Add in the proliferation of walk-on coaches, whose complicated
lives don’t often blend well with the demands of keeping the local
newspaper informed, and the challenge of comprehensive coverage can
be daunting.
But consider it my New Year’s resolution.
*
In search of a diversion from the Newport-Mesa sports world, I
ventured to Pauley Pavilion to witness the West Coast coronation of
LeBron “King” James, whose Akron, Ohio-based St. Vincent-St. Mary
boys basketball team topped Mater Dei, 64-58, in the Pangos Dream
Classic.
James, a 6-foot-7 senior considered the best prep player in the
nation and a potential No. 1 pick in the upcoming NBA draft, finished
with 21 points, nine rebounds and seven assists, but couldn’t have
been more disappointing. Granted, it would have been difficult for
him to live up to the hype and he, perhaps, won’t have a worse
shooting performance (8 for 25) this season. But, with misses from 20
(air ball), eight, 18, 15, 23, 19, 21, 20, 18, 25, 15, 20, 21, 21,
two, two and 22 feet, with only three of his field goals coming
outside layup range (17, 12 and 16 feet), he personified the shooting
malaise that continues to afflict the game beyond the high school
ranks.
It has been reported that Centennial of Compton star Aaron
Afflalo’s 42-point performance against Carson in the Dream Classic
upstaged James.
But, for the few among the capacity crowd of more than 11,000 who
stayed for the late evening game, the 27 points poured in by
Sebastian Telfair, a junior point guard from Lincoln High in
Brooklyn, may have been the evening’s biggest signature statement.
Telfair, who drilled five three-pointers and consistently wowed
the crowd with his creative ball handling and passing before exiting
midway through the third quarter, just may wind up making the biggest
NBA impact of those who took the floor Saturday.
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