Let there be LIGHT
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Mike Sciacca
For more than 25 years, the Ocean View High football program has
searched for a home-field advantage.
Home sites have varied through those years and bus routes
throughout the city and beyond have been constant on game day. The
football stadium at Huntington Beach High had been the main site
Ocean View called “home.”
But on the night of Sept. 19, Ocean View will finally know what
it’s like to have the home-field edge when the Seahawks host Tesoro
in a nonleague contest in the first official varsity “home” game in
school history.
The lights are in, the fence is up and the ticket booth is ready
to accept spectators.
“It’s about time,” said senior Brett Burda, a three-year varsity
player. “It’s inspirational to be able to play in front of a real
home crowd.
“You know, when we’d play our ‘home’ games on the road, it was
actually painful to have to be bused all the time. We’d also lose the
crowds when we had to play home games away from home. Now, we have to
walk a few feet from our own locker room to the playing field. It’s
going to be awesome.”
Seahawks Coach Harold Eggers said Karen Gilden, principal at Ocean
View, funded the majority of the stadium project and was a key
figurehead in getting the stadium put in place.
“We are all so pleased with the effort Principal Gilden and our
administration, boosters and community put forth in helping this
stadium project come to life,” Eggers said. “The kids are excited and
the coaches are excited. It’s just a nice feeling to walk out of the
locker room into your own stadium.”
Eggers said the initial set of stands -- set on the west side of
the stadium -- seats 1,500. He also said the school is looking into
raising funding to bring in additional portable stands.
Right now, the field sits unadorned. There are no yard markers or
chalk lines, no painted end zones or midfield emblems.
“We’d like to spruce up the field, like paint the goalposts and
have some type of Ocean View logo out there,” said Eggers, who added
he is still on the lookout for a company to paint the playing field.
But the stadium is there and the lights are ready to shine on
Sept. 19.
“It’s really exciting,” said Aaron Gonya, another senior and
three-year varsity performer. “We’ve been hearing about the
possibility of getting our own stadium for years and now it’s come
true. Now, we have a sense of home. The new stadium will allow this
group of seniors to go out with a bang.”
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