Pirates hardly thin on talent
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Bryce Alderton
Activity isn’t likely to stop, even during timeouts of Orange Coast
College women’s basketball games this winter.
Mike Thornton, entering his 16th season guiding Coast, is selling
this year’s team on intensity, instructing his players to go “all
out” while they’re on the floor.
Just who is on the floor for the Bucs, who come off a 14-15 season
and first-round Southern California regional playoff exit, will
change quite frequently.
But Thornton is OK with that.
Coast has just nine players this season, two fewer than the
smallest roster during Thornton’s previous 15 seasons.
OCC started preseason practices with 12, but that number dwindled
after potential players stopped attending once they realized they
weren’t going to make the top nine. Some also had family problems to
attend to, Thornton said.
Despite the thin bench, Thornton said the Pirates make up for the
lack of numbers with cohesiveness and intellect.
“We are a smart team whose work ethic is as good as any I’ve had
here,” said Thornton, who led Coast to the program’s only state
championship in 2002. “I’ve stressed effort and intensity because
those are things we didn’t do well with last year. I don’t know how
good we are going to be, but we are going to play hard all year long.
The wins will take care of themselves.”
The Pirates, whose two tallest players, returners Rhondi Naff
(Costa Mesa High) and Lauren Stepanski, each stand 6-foot, will
likely rely on more of a motion offense -- often using three guards.
Coast ran a half-court offense primarily through center Alisa
Carrillo last season. Carrillo was the Orange Empire Conference
Player of the Year after averaging team-leading totals in points
(17.2) and rebounds (6.9) per game.
Carrillo is a starting at forward for Southern Illinois
University-Edwardsville, an NCAA Division II school.
“We are thin on the front line, so we’re going to pick up our
full-court pressure and give our guards the opportunity to
double-team,” Thornton said. “Our guard play should be better.”
Six of the nine can play guard, including freshmen Crystal
McCormick from Capistrano Valley, Valerie Katayama from Edison,
Christen D’Alessandro (Laguna Hills) and Teeya Fernandez. Sophomore
returners Jessica Chades and Ruby Viloria also bolster Coast’s
backcourt.
Chades led the Pirates in steals (63) and assists (106) last
season.
Thornton said the Pirates could feature three different starting
lineups for three different games. He tentatively gave the starting
nods to Katayama at the point, McCormick at the two and D’Alessandro
at the three, prior to the season-opening Mt. San Antonio tournament,
which ended Sunday with the Pirates finishing fourth.
“All three have a great work ethic that has carried over to the
rest of the team,” Thornton said.
D’Alessandro, who made a steal in the waning seconds that helped
Coast preserve a 60-59 victory over Solano in the season opener Nov.
12, played the first four games last season before mononucleosis
sidelined her for the rest of the year.
Naff, who has committed to Cal State Bakersfield, and Stepanski
anchor the frontcourt and Thornton has been impressed with their
improvement.
Naff, a two-time first-team All-Golden West League selection at
Costa Mesa, finished second on the team with 10.4 ppg and 23
three-pointers.
“[Naff] should be one of the better players in the [Orange Empire
Conference],” Thornton said. “She has worked on the things she needed
to work on, such as going to her left. She is also physically
stronger. She bought into the strength program and her defense has
improved a lot.”
Stepanski averaged 5.6 rebounds and 4.4 points a year ago, the
former good for second on the team. Thornton expects that success to
continue.
“[Stepanski] has a nose for the ball and moves better than she did
last year,” Thornton said. “She has got the ability to play a lot if
she stays healthy.”
Waiting in the wings along the front lines is freshman Nancy
Castro, the reigning Newport-Mesa Player of the Year who averaged 19
points and 9.7 rebounds as an Estancia senior last winter.
“[Castro] is like a sponge,” Thornton said. “She wants to learn
and has a tremendous work ethic. “She is playing hard all the time
and she plays a lot. But I told the players that we’re not going to
have one starting lineup at the beginning of the season.”
Thornton expects frequent rotations and said he would be surprised
if anyone plays more than 30 minutes a game.
That is, unless the injury bug hits.
“The only way someone would play close to 40 minutes would be if
three or four people were hurt,” Thornton said. “But we’re going into
the season with all nine healthy.”
Coast will again face a difficult conference struggle, Thornton
said.
He lumped Cypress, defending conference champion Fullerton and
Riverside as the top three teams, followed by Coast, Saddleback and
Irvine Valley in the middle, with Golden West and Santa Ana rounding
out the eight squads.
Cypress entered the season ranked No. 12 in the California
Community College Women’s Basketball Coaches’ Association’s preseason
top 20 poll. Riverside and Fullerton came are Nos. 16 and 17,
respectively.
But the Pirates aren’t the only teams with small numbers.
Saddleback begins the season with nine while Fullerton and Cypress
each carry 10.
Thornton said “it’s just one of those years” with less numbers all
around.
The play, though, should be unaffected, he said.
“The quality of play is going up, not down,” Thornton said.
Coast begins conference play against host Saddleback Jan. 5.
The Pirates will compete in five tournaments leading up to the
conference opener without a single nonconference game on the
schedule.
Thornton purposely scheduled more tournament appearances to give
his players more games. In the past, Coast played in four tournaments
along with two nonconference contests.
“Sometimes it’s hard playing three nights in a row, but I thought
the opportunity for an extra game is better than anything else,”
Thornton said.
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