Prep Rally: Itβs time to celebrate the top 2022 baseball and softball players
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Hi, and welcome to another edition of Prep Rally. My name is Eric Sondheimer. Itβs time to celebrate the top 2022 baseball and softball players in Southern California with the release of The Timesβ all-star teams.
Baseball MVP: Gavin Grahovac
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One reliable way to project a future major leaguer is by the way they handle adversity in high school. Everyone knows how good junior Gavin Grahovac of Villa Park is at the plate. Then thereβs the maturity he has when the game is over.
Villa Park was one swing away from advancing to the Southern Section Division 1 championship game. San Juan Capistrano JSerra decided not to let him do it. He was intentionally walked to load the bases in the bottom of the seventh. Then came a strikeout of the next batter, ending a 4-1 defeat.
Afterward, instead of throwing a bat, making excuses or hiding in the dugout, Grahovac calmly and confidently stood there answering questions and preparing for his next game whenever it would come. He showed a resiliency and a maturity combined with his exceptional skills that will make him Southern Californiaβs top baseball prospect for 2023.
βThings didnβt go our way, but we had a great season and Iβm proud of all our players,β he said.
JSerra coach Brett Kay called him βthe best player on the planet.β He might not be that, but he had quite a season and is The Timesβ baseball player of the year.
Hereβs the link to Grahovacβs background.
Hereβs the link to the all-star team.
Hereβs the link to the coach of the year, Marcus Alvarado of Chatsworth.
Hereβs the link to the final 25 baseball rankings.
Hereβs the link to all the teams in one story.
Softball MVP: Kiki Estrada
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Patience was the virtue Kiki Estrada of Orange Lutheran had to practice again and again this softball season. She was feared so much at the plate that intentional walks came en masse.
βIf they werenβt intentional walks, they were intentional unintentional,β quipped Orange Lutheran coach Steve Milkos.
She was considered the No. 1 first baseman in the nation and lifted up teammates with her fielding and hitting. She batted .500 with 34 hits, 32 RBIs and nine home runs. The Arkansas commit is The Timesβ softball player of the year.
βSheβs a force,β Milkos said.
Hereβs the link explaining what made Estrada the player of the year.
Hereβs the link to the softball all-star team.
Hereβs the link to the coach of the year, Mike Smith of Eastvale Roosevelt.
Hereβs the link to final softball rankings.
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JSerra welcomes adaptive PE
Every Wednesday this spring, a couple hours after the final bell echoes through JSerra Highβs hallways, the chairs and the rackets come out at the tennis courts.
Keith and Kirk Orahood, twin brothers whoβve coached tennis at JSerra for more than a decade, have come to know the group well. Miles, with the smile. Nellie, the giggly 10-year-old. Gianna, who has a prosthetic leg and is labeled the best athlete in her family.
All have disabilities, impairing their ability to walk. None had played tennis before attending an after-school camp held by the Orahoods. Yet at the end of each half-hour session, they wheel into a circle and hold out their rackets, lifting them to the sky after a chant of β1-2-3, tennis!β
βThereβs a little bit of heaven going on on these courts,β Keith Orahood said.
The first step in an initiative to build a multi-sport adaptive athletics program at JSerra, the Orahoods have been running this wheelchair tennis clinic since April 13. The plan, they say, is to turn the school into a βmeccaβ for adaptive sports in the area.
βThis is a population of kids that we have not necessarily served yet,β said Chris Ledyard, JSerraβs athletic director. βWhen it came to be something that Keith did and it worked so well, itβs like, βWow, letβs start looking at this across the board.ββ
Hereβs the profile that can help many in Orange County.
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No more Arlis Boardingham
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There was a changing of the guard last week, the opening of summer football workouts at two-time defending City Section champion Birmingham. For the first time in four years, there was no Arlis Boardingham on the field. The 6-foot-5 four-year starter is off to Florida.
Coach Jim Rose wasnβt in panic mode when asked if there will be life without Boardingham playing receiver and linebacker.
βWe survived before he was here, weβll survive after he was here,β Rose said.
The player identified to become the Patriotsβ next big-play weapon is junior Peyton Waters, who has grown to 6 feet 1, 165 pounds, after a productive sophomore season when he became a dangerous receiver and standout cornerback in the playoffs.
βIt is a big responsibility,β Waters said of filling the roles Boardingham was so good at performing. βI feel I can handle it.β
The priority for Waters, 16, this summer is to spend hours in the weight room getting stronger.
A look at Waters and other young players who could be leading Birmingham this fall.
Richard Masson returns
Richard Masson just canβt say no to people asking him to coach basketball even if he has retired several times.
He began coaching boysβ basketball in 1975 at L.A. Jordan. He was an assistant to Dave Yanai at Fremont. He spent 22 years as head coach at Carson. He spent two years assisting the girlsβ program at North Torrance. He was girlsβ coach at Rolling Hills Prep for seven years.
Now heβs coming back as girlsβ coach at Carson, which lost several games last season by more than 40 points. Once a Colt, always a Colt.
Football
The seven-on-seven season is in full swing. Thousand Oaks and La Serna won tournaments this past weekend.
At Moorpark College, Thousand Oaks defeated Sierra Canyon in the final. The Lancers still havenβt decided on a starting quarterback, so it was a good way to get everyone motivated.
Newbury Park unveiled freshman quarterback Brady Smigiel, the son of new coach Joe Smigiel.
Hart has junior receiver Shawn Irwin, the younger brother of Cincinnati Bengals receiver Trent Irwin.
Notes . . .
Gardena Serra is searching for a new boysβ and girlsβ track coach. It is the school where state 100 champion Rodrick Pleasant competes, along with some outstanding girlsβ runners that helped the Cavaliers win a state title. . . .
Carlos Hernandez, a senior receiver at Monrovia, has committed to Washington State. . . .
Andrew Patterson is the new football coach at L.A. Marshall. . . .
Toby Manheim, a linebacker at Palisades last season, has transferred to Chaminade for his senior year. . . .
San Dimas softball coach Don Pollard has retired. He spent 24 years as head coach, winning 19 league titles. . . .
Senior guard Mike Price is headed to Corona Centennial. It will be his fourth school. Heβll get to play with Duke-bound Jared McCain and highly recruited Devin Williams. . . .
Quarterback Aidan Chiles of Downey has committed to Oregon State. . . .
Receiver Baylin Brooks of Loyola has committed to San Diego State.
From the archives: Lucas Gordon
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Former Sherman Oaks Notre Dame pitcher Lucas Gordon has become a key player for Texas, which is headed to the college baseball World Series.
Heβs the No. 2 pitcher for the Longhorns. He was a standout at Notre Dame and had his senior season cut short in 2020 because of COVID-19. Before it happened, he came through with a memorable performance against Chaminade, retiring 19 straight batters and getting 11 strikeouts.
Hereβs an interview with Gordon from 2020 detailing his lost season.
Hereβs a 2019 story coming back from elbow surgery.
Recommendations
From the Washington Post, a discussion on how to improve PE.
From Maxpreps, a story on the leader of the national high school sports governing body expressing concerns over NIL.
From the Los Angeles Times, a story on an incoming USC offensive lineman who talks and talks.
Tweets you might have missed
Until next time...
Have a question, comment or something youβd like to see in a future Prep Rally newsletter? Email me at [email protected], and follow me on Twitter at @latsondheimer.
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