Tourney scores big with kids
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Elia Powers
Elizabeth Lejsek, 15, just wouldn’t let her friend get a word out of
his mouth.
As she stood next to La Serna High School classmate Jared Kozak,
also 15, her excitement couldn’t be contained.
“We have a lot of fans here,” said Lejsek, a point guard on the
20-person “Net Force” recreational team. “This is my favorite sport,
because I can be with all the boys.”
Her team, comprising young athletes ages 8 to 18 from Whittier,
competed Saturday afternoon in a three-game basketball exhibition at
Corona del Mar High School. Their games were part of the 15th annual
Special Olympics Orange County Basketball Tournament.
Special Olympics affords children and adults with intellectual and
physical disabilities the opportunity to participate in year-round
athletic competitions in 20 Olympic-type sports.
The hoops event is one of the largest of the year, said Special
Olympics Orange and Riverside County Regional Director Kris Drummond.
“It’s the camaraderie that’s so special,” Drummond said. “The
players are hugging each other, even if they don’t win. It’s what
athletics were meant to be.”
Participants wearing blue, black and light-colored jerseys filled
the floors of adjacent gymnasiums. Most teams played three games and
spent their down time running practice drills, layup lines and
participating in an outdoor free-throw contest.
The Net Force team has played together for six years, Coach
Allison Leibig said. It made its Corona del Mar tournament debut this
year, joining two teams each from Newport Beach and Costa Mesa.
Every tournament participant had to have at least eight weeks of
training leading up to Sunday, in accordance with Special Olympics
rules.
Sixteen teams representing programs from throughout Orange County
squared off at the event, which included women’s teams for the first
time in the tournament’s history.
The event is sponsored in part by the city of Newport Beach.
Recreation coordinator Scott Williamson said about 160 athletes
attended the event.
The Newport Harbor Elks Lodge #1767 and Orange County District
Golf Elks hosted skills clinics during breaks in play. Volunteers
from the Saddleback Kiwanis Club and students from Corona del Mar
High School helped referee games and serve food to participants.
Longtime Kiwanis club member Elvan Whiteleather took photographs
of the athletes as a volunteer.
“I enjoy the athletic part,” he said. “It’s a good outlet for kids
to be able to compete and see themselves succeeding.”
Earlier in the day, the athletes walked into the building to the
strains of “We Are The Champions” during the opening ceremonies. Each
participant received a medal for competing.
The event served as a qualifying meet for the Special Olympics
Southern California Summer Games, which will take place June 10 to 12
at Cal State Long Beach.
* ELIA POWERS is the enterprise and general assignment reporter.
He may be reached at (714) 966-4623 or by e-mail at
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