Breaking toward CIF
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Mike Sciacca
A quirk in the schedule won’t deter the Laguna Beach High girls’
water polo team from achieving goals they have set.
Although they will jump back-and-forth between league play to
nonleague play during the final three weeks of the regular season,
the Breakers still have an eye on a possible Pacific Coast League
championship.
The team’s goal of qualifying for the upcoming CIF Southern
Section Division II playoffs is always on the agenda.
“This team is right on course, really,” said coach Rick McKee.
“They’re playing well against tough competition and are having a nice
season.
Laguna reached the 10-victory plateau last Friday by defeating
nonleague foe Tustin, and the Breakers are continuing that trend this
week by taking a break from the rigors of league competition.
But it’s not an easy sidestep to the league schedule.
Laguna played a nonleague match Thursday at Villa Park, and will
face Edison on Monday in another nonleague game.
Villa Park, currently ranked fourth behind Laguna in the Division
II poll, is the team that eliminated Laguna last year in the playoff
semifinals.
Following the Edison match, the Breakers resume PCL play Wednesday
at Tesoro, and face their final league test Feb. 4 by hosting No.
7-ranked University.
But between the Tesoro and University matches, the Breakers will
have faced Santa Monica and Peninsula (No. 8 in Division II), in
nonleague play.
The prestigious So Cal Championships looms Feb. 5-7 and the
regular season winds up with a Feb. 12 match at San Clemente, the
seventh-ranked team in Division I.
McKee said that although his squad is at the pace he expected, a
Dec. 18 match against highly-ranked Canyon revealed exactly where his
Breakers needed to be.
The visiting Commanches took home an 8-6 victory, despite the fact
that Laguna assaulted the Canyon goal with 40 shots attempts.
“Back in the Canyon game, we were four or five steps away from
where we wanted to be,” he said. “We’ve taken the necessary steps
since that game, though, to gradually get to where we are.
“I’d like to see the girls be thinking one step ahead in a game,
though. That’s what a strong varsity team does.”
Laguna has established its No. 3 ranking in Division I without one
senior starter.
Several juniors and a couple of freshmen who have figured
prominently in the Breakers’ success.
There are no sophomores on the roster, either.
But despite being on course, an area of contention this season,
McKee said, is that the Breakers had drawn 105 ejections as of Jan.
16, yet have converted only one-third of them.
“The girls have done an excellent job of getting into position,”
he said. “They just need to take advantage and convert in those
situations.”
Utility player Addison Doud has stepped to the forefront as a
leader in the pool, taking on the role in a “mutual agreement,” McKee
said.
“She’s really matured into the role and done a great job this
season,” McKee said. “She’s our leading scorer.”
Doud had scored 56 goals through Jan. 20 and is averaging nearly
five goals per game.
“She probably has one of the strongest shooting arms on a player
that I’ve seen,” McKee said. “She’s got great velocity on her shot.
“One area I see Addison working on to improve her game is her
swimming speed and when she does that, she can become, in my opinion,
one of the most dominant water polo players in Southern California.”
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