Goal oriented
- Share via
Mike Sciacca
By her own account, Annie Preble isn’t very athletic by nature.
She gave volleyball a try during her freshman year at Laguna Beach
High but, she said, she “wasn’t at all good” on the court.
Other than giving that sport a shot, the most intense training she
said she has had is with ballet, which she studied for 10 years.
So how, then, would she describe her blossoming from a raw,
untested freshman into one of the top female water polo players in
Orange County?
“I can’t really say it’s just from one thing, but I know that I
have worked hard in improving every year,” said the Laguna Beach High
senior, who turns 18 today.
Preble, primarily a 2-meter/holeset player, but who also is listed
as a utility player because of her ability to play well at all
positions, has worked her way through the ranks, Breakers coach Rick
Scott said.
“She has contributed to our varsity program the past three years
and has a tremendous love of the sport and a desire to improve
herself as a player,” he said. “She has made improvements every
year.”
It was Scott who encouraged Preble, who was his teacher’s aide at
Thurston Middle School at the time, to give water polo a try.
“I had never even seen a water polo game before -- I was
completely clueless as to how it was played,” she said. “The first
day I got to the pool was the first day of ‘Hell Week.’ I had to
learn quickly.”
To say that Preble took to the water is an understatement.
She said she really got into water polo after her sophomore year.
She has also played with the TRAP club water polo program for the
past three years.
She was on the program’s 16-and-under and 18-and-under teams,
which reached the Junior Olympics -- the former, in the summer before
her junior year, the latter, this past summer.
Her latest Junior Olympic appearance came after a junior year that
saw her earn first-team All-Pacific Coast League and second-team
All-CIF honors.
This season, she is closing in on the school’s single-season
scoring record -- which is 108 goals.
“She has a good shooter’s mentality,” Scott said. “She loves to
score and makes it a challenge not to let anyone stop her. Most teams
have to double-team her, which in turn allows our other players more
opportunities to score.
“She is an outstanding holeset with a variety of shots,” he said.
“Her strong, outside shot also finds the cage consistently, which
makes her difficult to guard.”
Just ask Tustin, which found out the hard way on Jan. 17.
Preble burned the Tillers for an incredible 10 goals in an 18-5
Laguna victory.
She came back the next day to score four more goals in an 8-4
victory over then-No. 2 Villa Park.
At the midway point this week, Laguna was 13-3 and ranked No. 5 in
the CIF Division II poll.
Scott said that Preble learned a lot about the game of water polo
by watching the Laguna boys’ games this past year, as well as
watching other teams play.
“She always asks questions and desires to know how to improve
herself and the team,” he said. “Annie is driven to be a better
player. She would definitely rank among the best group of girls we
have had play water polo here at Laguna Beach.”
Preble is one of four seniors on this year’s team, a group that
includes Lina Moore, Jenny Lenker and Kari Herdman.
“They all give great senior leadership, and I think another big
reason for our success is that our sophomores have stepped up and
have played well,” Preble said of a sophomore foursome of Addison
Doud, Katherine Gordon, Annie Nelson and Liz Roolidge. “They’ve all
done an awesome job.”
Preble has set high team goals for the season, which, if things
were to turn out according to her plan, would have Laguna Beach
playing in the Division II championship match in late February.
“I think we have the talent and determination to do it,” said
Preble, who has a personal goal of playing collegiate water polo at
the Division I level.
UC Irvine, Long Beach State and Loyola Marymount, where she said
she will take a recruiting trip later this month, have expressed
interest.
“We’ve had a great season so far and there’s a lot more water polo
to play,” she added. “This team can go very far.”
Much the same way Preble has done in the sport of water polo.
* MIKE SCIACCA covers sports for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. He can be reached at 494-4321 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.