eb issue 23, 05.12.2011

40
N e w breed ta kin g o ve r NCS swim m in g . P g. 14 ENDURE | EXCEL | ACHIEVE MAY 12, 2011 VOL. 2. ISSUE 23 FREE EAST BAY RUBBER SIDE DOWN WILD WALK THUMBS DOWN State mountain bike finals on horizon. Pg. 17 Tim Ritter is tackling the Pacific Crest Trail. All 2,650 miles of it. Pg. 26 We weigh in on decision for more CIF football. Pg. 6 WIN BIG! Grand Prize Giveaway. Pg. 27 Marissa Neel, San Ramon Valley

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high school sports, swimming, baseball, softball, lacrosse, tristars

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

New breed taking over NCS swimming. Pg. 14

endure | excel | achieveMay 12, 2011vol. 2. issue 23

Freeeast bay

rubberSide

dowN

wild walk

thumbS dowN

State mountain bike finals on horizon. Pg. 17

Tim Ritter is tackling the Pacific Crest Trail.

All 2,650 miles of it. Pg. 26

We weigh in on decision for more CIF football. Pg. 6

wiN biG! Grand Prize Giveaway. Pg. 27

Marissa Neel, San Ramon Valley

Page 2: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011
Page 3: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011
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4 SportStars™ Upload photos and team stats! www.SportStarsMag.comMay 12, 2011

all access

First Pitch ........................................ 6

Locker Room ................................. 8

Behind the Clipboard ................... 7

SportStar of the Week ............... 11

Wally’s World ............................... 12

Club Scene .................................... 17

Tee2Green .................................... 18

Health Watch ............................... 24

TriStars .......................................... 26

Extra Bases ................................... 30

Training Time ................................ 32

Camps + Clinics .......................... 34

Impulse .......................................... 36

Photo Finish .................................. 38

las lomas turns heads with its turnaround. Page 30

what can chelsea chenault & carondelet do for an NCS encore?

Page 14

WINNING TIME:Acalanes girls

lacrosse has sights set beyond league

domination. Page 20ON THE COVER

Swimmer Marissa Neel of San Ramon Valley. Photo by Bob Larson

Jonathan Hawthorne

Jonathan Hawthorne

Page 5: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011
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6 SportStars™ Upload photos and team stats! www.SportStarsMag.com

Sometimes you just have to scratch your head.

The California Interscholastic Federa-tion gave several of us a reason to do just that on April 29. And we honestly don’t think we’re alone.

The CIF — the state’s governing body for all things high school sports — had a meeting of its Federated Council on April 29. And during said meeting, it approved a proposal by the CIF’s Football Advisory Committee to add a regional playoff game to the current postseason format beginning with the 2012-13 school year.

The current state football postseason has been in effect for five years now — after the CIF finally got its act together and became the last state to host any kind of champion-ship football games at the state level. It was built as a bowl game system in which the 10 section commissioners would convene in a closed-door meeting to select North vs. South matchups from a pool of section champions across various enrollment-based divisions. It began with three games, and expanded to five after two years.

It wasn’t perfect. There tended to be a hand-ful of presumed “snubs” each season when the committee announced the bowl matchups. Furthermore, the system has seen criticism when it comes to the enrollment classification breakdowns and how the criteria for selection is weighed from one decision to another.

There were good things that were added, though. For instance, the Open Division game began in 2008, allowing the section commissioners to choose who they thought was the best team from each end of the state — regardless of enrollment — and pit them against each other in what would presumably be the most elite of all five bowl games. While it led to more subjective decisions behind closed doors, it did help determine the Cal-HiSports.com’s State Team of the Year in each of the past two seasons.

But now another tier of games is being added to the schedule. Five regional playoff games in both the North and South where winners from each division would ad-vance to play in the State Championship Bowl games. It passed with a section vote of 7-3, with the North Coast Section and Southern Section among the three who were opposed.

From purely a fan’s perspective, this is probably going to be appealing. Many of these games are likely to be extremely competitive contests. Many writers and columnists who cover football across the state applauded the decision. But we

ask the question, what did it really solve? A reporter for the Sacramento Bee wrote,

“In short, CIF State Bowl teams will be decided on the field and not in a meeting room with stacks of papers, schedules, results and opinions.”

Not exactly true. The meetings with stacks of papers, schedules, results and opinions just come one week earlier. There’s still a closed-door meeting to determine the regional playoff pairings, and undoubtedly “snubs” will surface.

Furthermore, in many cases, it could weaken the quality of opponents each region sends to the state bowl games.

The creation of the Open Division in 2008 really gave the selection committee flexibility in awarding bowl berths. And thus a lot of times, they were still able to award who they thought were the two best teams in a region by putting one in the Open game and one in the bowl game that corresponded to its division. Now, as it’s set up, the Open Division regional champion-ship will effectively eliminate one of the North’s best two teams.

CalHiSports.com created what it pro-jected would’ve been the regional bowl game matchups from the 2010 season. The Northern Regional Open Division final would likely have featured De La Salle-Concord vs. Folsom. Both of those teams won State Bowl games this past December.

De La Salle won another State Team of the Year honor after a 48-8 demolition of Servite-Anaheim. But in the preced-ing game, Folsom won the Division II championship as the crowd and television audience got to see one of the most excit-ing spread offense attacks in high school football — all run by a 5-foot-7 quarterback (Dano Graves) who ended being named the MaxPreps.com National Player of the Year. In the new format, one of those teams may have eliminated the other.

We haven’t even come to the 16 games argument yet. That’s right, some teams reaching the State Bowl games would be playing their 16th game. That’s a pro schedule, people.

College teams top out at 14. Something’s wrong with that equation, right? (And we wonder why concussions are on the rise in high school football?)

SportStars headquarters harbors more than a few die hard high school football fans. But something about this just doesn’t feel right. ✪

May 12, 2011

Chace bryson editor

FirSt PitCh

Chace@ SportStarsMag.com

(925) 566-8503

PHONE 925.566.8500 FAX 925.566.8507EdiTORiAl [email protected] Chace Bryson. Ext. 104 • [email protected] Bill Kolb, Erik Stordahl, Mike Wolcott, Jim Mannion, Mitch Stephens, Dave DeLong, Gary Xavier, Doug Gardner, Matt Smith, Clay Kallam, Jim McCue, Eric Gilmore, Ray WolfePhotography Butch Noble, Bob Larson, Jonathan Hawthorne, Chris Austria, Darryl Henick

CREATiVE dEPARTmENT [email protected] manager Mike DeCicco. Ext. 103 • [email protected]

PublisHER/PREsidENTMike Calamusa. Ext. 106 • [email protected]

AdVERTisiNg & CAlENdAR/ClAssiFiEd [email protected] Executives Mike Wolcott Ext. 109 • [email protected]; Patrick McCormick Ext. 102 • [email protected]; Erik Stordahl • ErikS@Sport StarsMag.com (Special Sections, Calendar, Marketplace sales)

REAdER REsOuRCEs/AdmiNisTRATiONAd Traffic, Subscription, Calendar & Classified Listings [email protected] • Deb Hollinger. Ext. 101 •

disTRibuTiON/dEliVERy [email protected] manager Butch Noble. Ext. 107 • [email protected]

iNFORmATiON TECHNOlOgy John Bonilla

CFO Sharon Calamusa • [email protected] Manager/Credit Services Deb Hollinger. Ext. 101 • [email protected]

bOARd OF diRECTORsDennis Erokan, CEO, Placemaking GroupRoland Roos, CPA, Roland Roos & CoSusan Bonilla, State AssemblyDrew Lawler, Managing Director, AJ Lawler PartnersBrad Briegleb, Attorney At Law

COmmuNiTy sPORTsTARs™ mAgAziNEA division of Caliente! Communications, LLC5356 Clayton Rd., Ste. 222 • Concord, CA • [email protected] ON RECYCLED PAPER IN THE USA

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This Vol. #2, May 2011 Whole No. 22 is published by Caliente! Communications, LLC, 5356 Clayton Rd, Ste. 222, Concord, CA 94521. SportStars™© 2010 by Caliente! Communications, LLC. All rights reserved. Subscription rates: 24 issues, U.S. 3rd class $42 (allow 3 weeks for delivery). 1st class $55. To receive sample issues, please send $3 to cover postage. Back issues are $4 each. Reproduction in whole or in part without permission of Publisher is strictly prohibited. The staff and management, including Board of Directors, of SportStars™© does not advocate or encourage the use of any product or service advertised herein for illegal purposes. Editorial contributions, photos and letters to the editor are welcome and should be addressed to the Editor. All material should be typed, double-spaced on disk or email and will be handled with reasonable care. For materials return, please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. SportStars™© and STARS!™© Clinics are registered trademarks of Caliente! Communications, LLC.

Get noticed. Join today!www.SportStarsMag.com

it kills us to say it, but more football may not be good thing

SportStars wants to get your feedback on this issue. Are you in favor of the regional football playoff being added to the 2012 postseason? Tell us why or why not. And if not, what should be the solution? Email your thoughts to [email protected], and we’ll publish some of the responses in our May 26 issue.

Page 7: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

7SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™

My coach keeps saying I need to be more of a leader. She knows I don’t like to say a lot, so I’m confused. What does she mean?

— H.B., Newark

First, she doesn’t mean screaming at your teammates when things are going poorly. That’s not leadership; that’s immaturity. (There might be a time

and a place for some high-volume input, but we’ll talk about that later on.)

Leadership begins with one word: account-ability. And first and foremost, the leader must hold herself accountable for doing what needs to be done to help the team be the best it can be, on and off the field.

Here’s one obvious thing: Every high school team has rules about drinking and drugs, and the rules are simple — don’t indulge in them. Usually, team leaders are the older players and we all know that older high school students have plenty of access to alcohol (the most dangerous drug) and hosts of others. So the first job of a team leader is not to do any drugs (including alcohol).

That’s accountability, and it would also be considered a sacrifice by some — but if a team leader doesn’t follow one of the most basic rules of the school and the sport, she’s not being accountable to herself.

A leader also has a responsibility to keep her grades up, and stay out of trouble at school. Younger players model their behavior on what the leaders do, and though getting bad grades and being on a first-name basis with the dean in charge of discipline might make some people happy, it’s definitely not what most kids want.

When it comes to the team, leaders are always on time — and “on time” means being 15 minutes early to everything. Again, younger players will follow the leader, and if they see the team captains and best players 15 minutes early every

day, that’s what they’ll do, too.During practice, leaders work hardest at the most un-

popular drills, which usually means conditioning. In these situations, consistency is crucial — a leader who runs all-out during sprints only some of the time isn’t a leader; she’s a loafer. The captains and seniors set the tone, and if they don’t push themselves in conditioning, no one else will.

(Here’s one situation when a leader can raise her voice. If she goes hard all the time, she can call out the rest of the team (not an individual) for not working hard. She can’t say “Melissa, you need to touch the line, and run as hard as you can,” but she can say “If we want to be a good team, all of us have to touch the lines and run as hard as we can.” The message will be de-livered, but no one can really take it personally.)

During games, leaders cannot let their emotions get the better of them. A lot of good players put their heads down when they make mistakes — or even worse, when their team-mates do — and that brings the whole team down with them. A leader rises above her own feelings and shows her teammates her most confident, most positive side. This is especially important if the coach has just yelled at the team for sloppy play, or whatever. And at that point, it’s up to the leaders on the team to em-

phasize the positive.Finally, leaders have to produce. That doesn’t mean a

leader has to be the best hitter, or leading scorer, but she has to make plays — whether they are skill plays, hustle plays or smart plays, a leader has to help her team win.

There are times when a leader has to be vocal, but what’s really important is what people do, not what they say. If you want to be a leader, then act like a leader, and be accountable like a leader. Or, to use the cliché, walk the walk before you talk the talk. ✪

Submit a question for Behind the Clipboard, email Coach Kal-lam at [email protected]

May 12, 2011

Clay kallam

behind the Clipboard

team leaders don’t always need to be vocal, just accountable

Page 8: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

8 SportStars™ Upload photos and team stats! www.SportStarsMag.comMay 12 , 2011

“This is definitely big for us. We’ve been really streaky this

year, so it’s been tough. Hopefully this will be big for our confidence and we can win out over the last two weeks and get into the North Coast Section playoffs.”

Amador Valley-Pleasanton outfielder Aaron Hafford after he picked up the game-winning sacrifice fly in the bottom of the seventh during a 4-3 win over

Elk Grove — a team which entered the game ranked No. 4 in the state by CalHiSports.com.

he said what?!?

Well, we still don’t know when (or, really, if) the NFL season is going to start. There was a lockout. Then an injunction. And a stay. Staaaay. Now, sit. Rollover. Beg. Good dog. Anyway, in spite of all the labor nonsense, the league still hosted its annual auction, er, draft, and we here in the Bay Area had some horses in that race. So here are the Top 5 guys we’re rooting for from the 2011 NFL draft.

1. Ryan Whalen (Monte Vista-Danville, Stanford). Taken in the sixth round by the Bengals. Not bad for a walk-on at an egg-head school, huh?

2. Taiwan Jones (Deer Valley-Antioch, Eastern Washington). From Eastern WA back to the East Bay. We remember when the Wolverines’ Jones was torching defenses in his epic two-way senior season in 2006. Here’s guessing the Raiders wouldn’t mind a piece of that 9.3 yards-per-carry average he sported at DV.

3. Roy Helu Jr. (San Ramon Valley-Danville, Nebraska). Anybody else remember when Helu was a kinda skinny RB/WR combo with great hands with the Wolves? How we got from there to ground-chewing running back we’re still not sure. Maybe some-thing to do with the genetically-engineered corn?

4. Cheta Ozougwu (Rice). This year’s Mr. Irrelevant. Taken LAST overall by Houston with the 254th pick. Given our status as individuals who have been the last pick at one point or another (the 1989 chess team draft still haunts our dreams), how could we NOT be rooting for this guy?

5. Owen Marecic (Stanford). Somehow Jim Harbaugh and the Niners allowed Harbaugh’s ‘favorite player of all time’ to slip to the Browns in the fourth round. Regardless, you gotta love a guy who grows his hair out his senior season, not for vain, shampoo-shilling purposes (we’re talking to you, Troy Polamalu, and you, Clay Matthews), but in order to shear his tresses for Locks of Love. Plus, we can’t wait to see how many positions the two-way starter (LB, RB) can play in Cleveland. Let’s face it, the Browns could use help everywhere.

Mark this down in the almanac, people. That’s right, it’s SportStars’ first ever Top 5 Honorable Mention. We’re getting a jump on the 2012 draft (unless the Mayas were right, in which case, well, nice knowing you). But another dude we’re rooting for — who was part of the same 2006 high school class as Best, Jones, Whalen and Helu — is Brandon Rutley (Alhambra-Martinez, San Jose State). He might end up as the best tailback in Bulldogs AND Spartans history. He’s definitely one of the nicest kids we ever covered. We can’t wait to see him break some ankles on Sundays.

—Bill Kolb

Guys we’re rooting for after the 2011 NFl draft

Ali Thanawalla

Page 9: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

9SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ MAY 12, 2011

Of the 24 combined boys and girls events at the North Coast Section Swimming/Diving Championships, 14 have had new records set in the past three years. Four new records were set last year, all in the girls competi-tions. Chelsea Chenault of Carondelet-Concord (pictured) was responsible for three of them. For more cover-age of the upcoming swimming postseason, flip to page 14.

random acts of factness

How many miles do you run/

bike/swim in a week?

Celebrity you’d like to

hang out with for a day?

What animal describes you?

Why?

Frederika Weitze Hannah Rae Finchamp

Best finish in a race?

Best triathlon venue?

Favorite energy bar/drink? Homemade energy bar,

Cytomax

Run: 1-3 milesBike: 0

Swim: 0 (tough to find places to swim)

Clif Bar and Gatorade

Wildflower World Championship, Kaanapali, Maui

Run: 30Bike: 40 Swim: 10

Taylor Lautner Triathlete Shonny

Vanlandingham

Dog, lots of personality and

active

Secon place in first year in Wildflower upper

division

Gazelle, run with the grace

of one

Won world championship for

age group

rapid fire

NorCal Softball top 15Records are through May 7. Teams from the Central

section are not considered.1. Archbishop Mitty-San Jose ...........................................23-22. San Benito-Hollister ......................................................22-13. Sheldon-Sacramento ....................................................21-44. Elk Grove .......................................................................15-45. Johansen-Modesto .......................................................23-16. James Logan-Union City ..............................................16-37. Rodriguez-Fairfield .....................................................22-38. Sierra-Manteca ...........................................................21-1-19. Gilroy ..............................................................................20-410. Aptos ............................................................................18-411. Amador Valley-Pleasanton ..........................................14-512. Merrill West-Tracy .......................................................22-413. Soquel ..........................................................................19-414. Pinole Valley-Pinole ....................................................17-115. Newark Memorial-Newark ..........................................18-2

For the NorCal baseball 15, flip to extra bases on P. 30

Chris Scott/CalSportsPhoto.comMarissa Escalante, Rodriguez-Fairfield.

Jonathan Hawthorne

sPECiAl TRiATHlON

EdiTiON Competitors at the Wildflower

Triathlon April 30-May 1

Page 10: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

10 SportStars™ Upload photos and team stats! www.SportStarsMag.comMay 12 , 2011

Page 11: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

11SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

SportStars

of theweek

of theweek

who’s got next?nominations: [email protected]

Most competing snowboarders have the luxury of living just a few miles from the mountains. They can practice every day for hours on end. Not Ben Reutter. The Northgate-Walnut Creek senior uses the weekends to his advantage as he drives up to Lake Tahoe to practice with the Squaw Valley Snowboard Team. His dedication and hard work paid off as he took home second place in Boardercross at the USASA Nation-als at Copper Mountain, CO from April 1-12.

sportstars: Explain your crazy schedule. ben Reutter: In the winter from Decem-

ber to mid-April, every weekend I train with the Squaw Valley Snowboard team. I train all day on weekends. It’s my passion but it can be tiring.

sportstars: What have you learned from your coach?

bR: I learned a lot from him. Just the mindset that you have to have going into competitions. You really have to go all out.

sportstars: What was Copper Mountain like?

bR: Really fun experience. It was a really big event, people from all over the country go there. I got to compete at a high level.

sportstars: Where do you see yourself in the next five years as a snowboarder?

bR: Next year I’m going to UNR (Univer-sity of Nevada-Reno), traveling the nation a lot more and competing in more competi-tions, seeking better results in those. The X Games would be great.

BEN’S QUICK HITSFavorite snowboarder: Scott StevensFavorite trick: BackflipsFavorite course: Copper Mountain

ben reutternorthgate . snowboarding . senior

michael kicenskiThe Freedom-Oakley junior is undefeated in the high jump in Bay Valley Athletic League competition. He has won every 2011 meet he’s partici-pated in. He is bound for Chico State.

Raeann garza

James Logan’s sophomore threw a no-hitter for the Colts on May 3 in

a 10-0 win over Irvington. The win was No. 500 for James Logan coach Teri Johnson. Through May 9, the Colts were unbeated in MVAL play.

sydney shipley

The sophomore pitcher had 17 scoreless innings over four games

for Pinole Valley. She allowed just two hits. She posted a one-hit shut-out of Berkeley on April 29.

honorable mention

PhotoVAST/Vastaction.com

Page 12: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

12 SportStars™ Upload photos and team stats! www.SportStarsMag.com

This is a story about life, second chances, and giving something back.

In the case of Bob Hammer, you might want to go ahead and multiply”life” and “second chances” by two, and “giving something back” by the nth degree.

But first — write down this web address: www.haveaballgolf.com. It’s my goal that you visit this site just as soon as you finish this column.

Bob Hammer, 42, lives in Danville with his wife, Kim, and children Shayna, 11, and Josh, 8. He’s been active in sports, or coaching youth sports, for just about as long as he’s been alive. In years past, this meant 12 years as coach at Carlmont High in Belmont, where he coached three different girls to the state finals in the long jump in a five-year span. Currently, that means coach-ing San Ramon Valley softball, Danville Little League, Mustang Soccer and Danville basketball. 

As you will soon find out, all of this is miracle enough in itself. It’s what he has chosen to do with his miracle of life that should be enough to remind all of us that, in the end, all that really matters is the love (and hope) we’ve given others.

It’s a tough story to tell in 800 words, but here goes.

For starters, Hammer’s mother died of cancer on Christmas Day when he was 9.

Two decades later, he felt a lump on one of his testicles. It was cancerous. He had to have it removed.

Flash ahead to Christmas. While wrap-ping presents, Hammer collapsed. The cancer had returned. Twenty six rounds of chemotherapy knocked out the cancer. 

Still, he faced additional surgery or, he was told, he wouldn’t survive.

Enter Lance Armstrong.While Hammer was battling cancer, he

read Lance Armstrong’s book. At the time, anyone who raised more than $10,000 for the Lance Armstrong Foundation got the chance to meet Armstrong. Hammer, a marketing specialist for Peninsula Building Materials in Livermore, went to work. He raised $15,000.

He met Armstrong and Armstrong’s oncologist, Dr. Craig Nichols, in Texas. He told Nichols that he was having surgery in another week at Stanford and would be un-able to have any more children.

Nichols suggested he not have the surgery.It worked. So well, in fact, that just a

year later, Josh was conceived. (By natural means.)

(Click on the above-mentioned Web site and the first words you’ll see are “Early treatment for Bob’s testicular cancer not only

saved his life, it created a new one.” That’s Josh in the photo. But first, keep reading.)

With yet another miracle in place, Ham-mer was ready to start giving back.

He contacted another cancer survivor, Steven Seaweed (disc jockey for 107.7 The Bone), and together they got to work on or-ganizing the “Have a Ball Golf Tournament.”

“The first year I hoped to raise $25,000,” Hammer recalled. “I raised $50,000.”

He sent $35,000 to the Lance Armstrong Foundation and the rest to seven different organizations.

A lot has changed since the first Have a Ball Golf Tournament. The economy has floundered, and floundered again.

If you think a little thing like that would slow down Hammer’s determination or fun-draising ability, well, you don’t know Bob.

In six years, the tournament has raised more than $750,000, and will benefit 20 cancer organizations this year.

Along the way, Hammer has appeared on numerous local television broadcasts and been featured in more print interviews than could fit within the pages of this magazine. He remains the same determined, caring and personable person he’s been throughout this entire ordeal we call life.

Don’t think he doesn’t appreciate every second of it.

“You’ll be pushing your kid on a swing and something will hit you, You’ll think, ‘You’re not supposed to be here,’ “ Hammer told the San Francisco Chronicle in 2009.

He’s still here. Very much so. As it says elsewhere on his Web site, he’s still “chipping away at cancer – one ball at a time.”

Go ahead and click on that link now. There’s more to Bob’s story. Best of all, it’s entirely within your power to be in the next chapter, which is the 7th annual Have A Ball Golf Tournament on July 22 at Sunnyvale Municipal Golf Course.

So check it out. Celebrate life. And maybe help someone else have a second chance. They just might turn out to be another Bob Hammer. ✪

May 12, 2011

mike wolcott

wallY’Sworld

MikeW@ SportStarsMag.com

(925) 566-8500Ext. 109

bob hammer having a ball as cancer survivor who’s giving back7th annual have a ball Golf

tournament Friday, July 22

Sunnyvale Municipal Golf Course Foundation director: Bob Hammer [email protected]

www.haveaballgolf.com

Contributed photoBob Hammer with

Lance Armstrong in 2001.

Page 13: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

13SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

Athletes of Antioch Little League received the royal treatment on April 2 when O.C. Jones & Sons revamped their playing fields. By sponsoring the TLC for Kids Ballparks Program, O.C. Jones & Sons gets involved in the community by renovating little league fields in the Bay Area.

With special guests such as three-time Su-per Bowl winner and former San Francisco 49er Brent Jones, softball player and 2008 silver medalist Vicky Galindo — who starred on the high school diamond at James Logan-Union City — and KNBR’s Brian Murphy from the Murph & Mac Show, the event was a site to see. Hundreds of players dressed in uniform, family, and friends were on hand for this historic event.

The aforementioned along with O.C. Jones & Sons president Kelly Kolander and Antioch Little League’s very own Dennis Felix were amongst those who gave speeches for a mem-orable ribbon-cutting ceremony.

“Sponsoring the TLC for Kids Sports pro-gram has been a way for all of us at O.C. Jones to give back and our employees recognize there is always a way to give back,” said Kelly Kolander, President and CEO of O.C. Jones & Sons, Inc. “The children of Antioch Little

League will have a renewed sense of pride playing on their renovated field, knowing that someone took the time to lend a helping hand and give them a tool to succeed.

“We are excited about opening day and to see the visitors and players excitement sur-rounding the renovation and access now af-forded to the Challenger participants.”

Every year the TLC for Kids Ballparks Pro-gram holds a contest where they receive hun-dreds of entries from little leagues all over the Bay Area. This year they chose Antioch Little League and after months of planning, digging

and reshaping, the final product is nothing short of spectacular.

The fields of Antioch Little League look pa-latial. With a smooth playing field, fresh-cut grass and redone dugouts, little leaguers of all ages will be fortunate to grace these fields and play like the pros for years to come. For more information on the TLC for Kids Ball-parks Program or to find out how to enter your little league in the next contest, log on to www.tlcforkidssports.org or check out www.ocjones.com. ✪

antioch little league fields get an extreme makeover by oC JonesBy ERIK STORDAHL | SportStars

Kevin Kunishi PhotographyTOP: A coach and a few players try out the newly-renovated diamond

on Kelly Martin Field. bElOW: U.S. Olympic softball gold medalist Vicki

Galindo greets and signs autographs for young admirers.

Page 14: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

14 SportStars™ Upload photos and team stats! www.SportStarsMag.comMay 12, 2011

Kasey Carlson was wrapping up one of the most decorated swimming ca-reers in the history of the North Coast Section with ho-hum victories in the 200-yard medley relay, 100-yard breaststroke and 50 freestyle.

The Las Lomas High standout would close her career with 13 NCS first-place medals and her name on three section records and one national high school record.

Perhaps on any other year, that would’ve been the storyline to the NCS Swim-ming Championships. But not 2010.

Carlson’s sterling final high school swims were somewhat swallowed up in the wake of a mass of talented young swimmers making a splash in their NCS debuts.

Ten of the 22 events saw freshman or sophomores grab first-place finishes, either as individuals or part of a relay team. Five more events saw freshmen fin-ishing second to a senior champion. And in one race, a freshman finished second to another freshman.

It was a changing of the guard. The new wave of Bay Area swimming talent had arrived.

The school grabbing the most headlines was Carondelet-Concord as freshman Chelsea Chenault set NCS records in both the 200 and 500 freestyles, and then teamed up with fellow freshman Maddie White, sophomore Christina Ray and ju-nior Allison Gargalikis to set a national high school record in the 200 medley relay.

It’s not just East Bay swimmers, either. A list of the top high school swimming times throughout the state last year is dotted with young swimmers throughout Northern California. Sacred Heart Preps-Atherton’s Tom Kremer and Palo Alto’s Jasmine Tosky, both sophomores a year ago, were the fastest 200 freestyle swim-mers in the state. Chenault’s time in the NCS 500 freestyle final was also the state’s fastest time in that event.

Kim Carlson, Kasey’s mom and a former coach at both Carondelet and Las Lomas, pointed out that these waves of talent tend to be cyclical.

“(In regards to NCS) there were actually a lot of fast seniors who graduated last year,” she said. “They were part of their own (takeover) four years ago. I remem-ber (former Liberty-Brentwood and Stanford senior) Kate Dwelley referring to Kasey as a ‘whippersnapper’ when Kasey was a freshman back in 2007.”

The breakout performances of Chenault and others — the “whippersnappers” of 2010 — has led to a bit of a buzz as the 2011 season churns toward this years NCS championships on May 20-21 at Concord Community Pool.

“Last year it was all about the excitement and the hype,” said Chenault, who may have been at her first NCS meet in 2010, but was no novice to the elite swim-ming world. She was already a nationally-recognized swimmer for the Concord Terrapins Swim Club. “It wasn’t too stressful. It was just about having fun and

TalenT poolClasses of 2012, 2013 have taken over the North Coast Section and all of NorCal

By CHACE bRysON | Editor

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15SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

Kasey Carlson was wrapping up one of the most decorated swimming ca-reers in the history of the North Coast Section with ho-hum victories in the 200-yard medley relay, 100-yard breaststroke and 50 freestyle.

The Las Lomas High standout would close her career with 13 NCS first-place medals and her name on three section records and one national high school record.

Perhaps on any other year, that would’ve been the storyline to the NCS Swim-ming Championships. But not 2010.

Carlson’s sterling final high school swims were somewhat swallowed up in the wake of a mass of talented young swimmers making a splash in their NCS debuts.

Ten of the 22 events saw freshman or sophomores grab first-place finishes, either as individuals or part of a relay team. Five more events saw freshmen fin-ishing second to a senior champion. And in one race, a freshman finished second to another freshman.

It was a changing of the guard. The new wave of Bay Area swimming talent had arrived.

The school grabbing the most headlines was Carondelet-Concord as freshman Chelsea Chenault set NCS records in both the 200 and 500 freestyles, and then teamed up with fellow freshman Maddie White, sophomore Christina Ray and ju-nior Allison Gargalikis to set a national high school record in the 200 medley relay.

It’s not just East Bay swimmers, either. A list of the top high school swimming times throughout the state last year is dotted with young swimmers throughout Northern California. Sacred Heart Preps-Atherton’s Tom Kremer and Palo Alto’s Jasmine Tosky, both sophomores a year ago, were the fastest 200 freestyle swim-mers in the state. Chenault’s time in the NCS 500 freestyle final was also the state’s fastest time in that event.

Kim Carlson, Kasey’s mom and a former coach at both Carondelet and Las Lomas, pointed out that these waves of talent tend to be cyclical.

“(In regards to NCS) there were actually a lot of fast seniors who graduated last year,” she said. “They were part of their own (takeover) four years ago. I remem-ber (former Liberty-Brentwood and Stanford senior) Kate Dwelley referring to Kasey as a ‘whippersnapper’ when Kasey was a freshman back in 2007.”

The breakout performances of Chenault and others — the “whippersnappers” of 2010 — has led to a bit of a buzz as the 2011 season churns toward this years NCS championships on May 20-21 at Concord Community Pool.

“Last year it was all about the excitement and the hype,” said Chenault, who may have been at her first NCS meet in 2010, but was no novice to the elite swim-ming world. She was already a nationally-recognized swimmer for the Concord Terrapins Swim Club. “It wasn’t too stressful. It was just about having fun and

getting the high school swimming experience.”But Chenault and the rest of her teammates will have a few more concerns this

time around. “There’s definitely some pressure with how everyone expects you to do as well

or better than a year ago,” Chenault said. “We’re just hoping for good results and hopeful our training shows in our racing.”

They’re also hoping to hold off fellow East Bay Athletic League foe San Ramon Valley-Danville, which along with its own youth movement looks as though it might challenge Carondelet in its attempt to defend the girls team crown.

The Wolves are led by Marissa Neel, another Concord Terrapin who also took part in the 2010 NCS youth takeover by winning the 100 butterfly crown as a sophomore. Her time of 53.60 seconds in that event ranked as the third fastest in the state, bested only by Tosky (52.77) and Kendyl Stewart of La Costa Canyon-Carlsbad (52.43).

Neel, now a junior, is joined by senior Taylor Nafria and a freshman looking to make her own NCS-debut splash in the breaststroke, Heidi Poppe.

“She reminds me a lot of Kasey,” Kim Carlson said of Poppe. “She looks like her and swims like her. And she’s already got Olympic cuts.”

San Ramon Valley may actually have the psychological edge over Carondelet after beating the Cougars 96-89 in the teams’ EBAL dual meet on March 25. It is worth noting, however, that both Chenault and White did not compete for

Carondelet in the meet. The two swimmers were training with the national team in Chula Vista. Did we mention they’re on the current National Women’s Team roster?

Nonetheless, San Ramon Valley will be going into NCS confidently. “All season we thought we had no chance of winning at the EBAL champion-

ships or NCS, because (Carondelet) has so many national swimmers,” Neel said in early May. “But this past week we had a team meeting and we scored up what we thought people would swim and what we thought we could do points-wise. We’re kind of nervous about that, but I’m really excited.”

Chenault is more than aware that her Terrapins teammate and the rest of the San Ramon Valley team has an upset on its mind.

“Overall as a team, they’re very strong and know what they’re doing. So they’re definitely considered one of our top competitors.”

Carondelet and San Ramon Valley are just two NCS teams which will feature members of the 2010 youth boom. Other sophomores who will be defending NCS titles won as freshmen a year ago include Sven Campbell (Campolindo-Moraga, 200 medley relay), Steven Stumpf (Campolindo, 200 IM) and Charlie Wiser (Miramonte-Orinda, 100 backstroke).

“You can’t let your guard down at all,” Chenault said of the amount of talent in Northern California and the Bay Area. “It keeps you ready and and it keeps you prepared for everything that’s coming up in the future.” ✪

TalenT poolClasses of 2012, 2013 have taken over the North Coast Section and all of NorCal

By CHACE bRysON | Editor FAR lEFT: Carondelet-Concord swimmer Chelsea Chenault will face the pres-sures of repeating her epic

NCS finals performance from a year ago when she set three meet records as

a freshman. (Jonathan Hawthorne). lEFT: Marissa Neel, defending 100 butter-fly champion, is hoping her San Ramon Valley-Danville

teammates can steal the team title from Carondelet.

(Bob Larson)

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Three sections will be holding their champion-ship meets in the second and third weeks of May. The Sac-Joaquin Section goes first with its meet taking place May 12-13 at Tokay High in Lodi. The North Coast Section and Central Coast Sec-tion follow suit the following week, holding their championships on May 20-21. Here’s just a few swimmers to keep an eye on at each meet.

Central Coast SectionbOys

Tom Kremer, Sacred Heart Cathedral, Jr.Owned state’s fastest high school time in the

200 freestyle in 2010 at 1:37.45. He also ranked third for the 100 backstroke (50.05).

Adam Hinshaw, Saratoga, Sr.Second to Kremer among state times in the

200 freestyle (1:37.70). He also missed having the state’s best high school 500 freestyle time by three one-hundredths of a second (4:22.27)

giRlsLinnea Mack, Pioneer-San Jose, So.

Had the CCS’ fastest time in 100 backstroke a year ago (55.05). The time also ranked her seventh in the state for that event.

Maddy Schaefer, St. Francis-Palo Alto, Sr.Swam the state’s fastest high school freestyle

sprinter in 2010. She had the fastest time in the 50 (22.44) and the 100 (48.61)

Jasmine Tosky, Palo Alto, Jr.Part of the Women’s National Team roster for

2010-11, Tosky posted a national high school re-cord last year in the 200 breaststroke (1:44.11), topping the old record by a full second.

North Coast sectionbOys

Steven Stumpf, Campolindo-Moraga, So. Took first in last year’s 200 IM as a freshman.

He also finished second in the 100 backstroke.Jackson Miller, Las Lomas-

Walnut Creek, So.Possibly the best freshman swimmer to not

win an event at the 2010 NCS championships. He was second in both the 200, 500 freestyles.

giRlsChelsea Chenault, Carondelet-Concord, So.

The U.S. Women’s team member set the high school national record in the 500 freestyle

at 4:43.43 during the 2010 finals. Already owns three NCS records.

Catherine Breed, Amador Valley- Pleasanton, Sr.

Depsite not winning a section title a year ago, still posted Top 10 state times in two events. Ranked third in 200 freestyle, eighth in the 500. Marissa Neel, San Ramon Valley-Danville, Jr.

The section’s fastest swimmer in the 100 but-terfly had the state’s third-best high school time a year ago at 53.60. She also has a chance at winning the 100 backstroke this year.

Sac-Joaquin SectionbOys

Wade Allen, Davis, Sr.Posted the section’s fastest 50 freestyle a

year ago in 20.99.

Adam Jorgensen, Roseville, Sr.His 100 butterfly time of 49.32 ranked him

tops in his section and fourth in the state a year ago. He also had the state’s fifth-fastest 200 freestyle at 1:38.56.

giRlsMary Griffith, Tokay-Lodi, Sr.

She was a double-winner at last year’s meet, taking top medals in the 100 buttefly (54.27) and the 200 freestyle (1:48.77).

Kate Davey, Lincoln-Stockton, Sr.Owned the section’s fastest 200 IM time a

year ago with a mark of 2:02.74Andrew Murch, Granite Bay, Jr.

Narrowly missed owning the section’s top 100 backstroke time, but still ranked sixth in the state with a time of 50.58.

NorCal swimming glance: a look at some of the top swimmers

Tim Binning/TheSwimPhotos.comJasmine Tosky, Palo Alto

Jonathan HawthorneJackson Miller, Las Lomas

Jonathan HawthorneSteven Stumpf, Campolindo

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17SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

club scene

While traditional spring sports are getting close to wrapping up their seasons, the NorCal High School Mountain Biking League is hitting the home stretch, too. Racers from all over the nine-county Bay Area and up north competed in five league races this season.

The fifth race took place at Boggs Mountain in Cobb on May 1.

Sofia Hamilton, a senior at Sir Francis Drake-San Anselmo, finished third out 22 girls varsity racers with a time of 1:34:40.

Victoria Yoham of Marin Catholic-Kentfield finished sixth with a time of 1:42:12 while Erica Bilodeau led a fleet of San Ramon Valley-Dan-ville racers with an 11th place finish at 1:53:33. Hamilton sits second overall in the point stand-ings. Shayna Powless is first overall.

On the boys side, Bryan Duke of Salinas took home first place honors with a time of 1:42:12. Contra Costa Composite’s Andrew Taylor finished 15th out of 35 competitors and Travis lyons shook off a crazy start to finish 28th.

But the biggest race is yet to come: The State Championship on May 14 at Los Olivos in Solvang.

This race will bring together both leagues from Northern and Southern California. It will also serve as the qualifier for the National Mountain Bike Championships held in Sun Val-ley, Idaho, July 14-17.

For Taylor, a senior at Pleasant Hill Adventist Academy, he plans on competing in nation-

als then continuing his racing at Pacific Union College in the fall. He hopes to help start a mountain biking team on campus, which is ideal for the area as two races are held there every year.

Lyons, a senior at Northgate-Walnut Creek and former SportStars cover boy (Issue No. 16), will continue to ride locally as he’ll be attending Diablo Valley College in the fall.

He’ll also be checking in to Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo and UC Davis as both have strong cycling programs.

When it comes to which cycling discipline is more preferred — mountain or road — Taylor and Lyons disagree.

“There’s lots of different trails,” Taylor said. “You get on a mountain bike trail and from one trail to the next they’ll be completely different. There’s more excitement and more variety.”

Travis favored road racing.“Road racing is more tactical,” Travis said.

“You have more involvement with your team-mates. Road racing and mountain biking are very different. (With) mountain biking you need technical skills. (With) road racing, you need to be very sharp with your tactics and work as a team.”

baseball team built for national stage SportStars will be represented abroad this

summer as we’ll be sponsoring Cabernet Indoor Sports’ baseball teams through Nor Cal Travel Ball (NCTB). Baseball players ages 13-17 will get the opportunity to try out for the East Bay Stars 13U, 15U, and 17U teams.

Cabernet will soon be announcing dates of open workouts for interested players. Loca-tions for those workouts include Cabernet, The Pitching Center, Granada High in Livermore and Modesto Junior College. Cabernet will eventu-ally select 18 players for each East Bay Stars squad, and those chosen will get to represent Northern California in the National Team Identi-fication Series at the USA Baseball Complex in North Carolina in September.

Players can be selected from all over the Bay Area, but Cabernet is keeping the majority of its focus in the East Bay.

For open workout information, contact The Pitching Center’s Jason Sekany at [email protected]. ✪

Want to see your club team in Club Scene? Email Erik Stordahl at [email protected].

mountain bikers gear up for the high school state championshipBy ERIK STORDAHL | SportStars

Bob LarsonTravis Lyons

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18 SportStars™ Upload photos and team stats! www.SportStarsMag.comMay 12, 2011

tee2green

Sborov lines up a grueling summer golf scheduleIt’s going to be a busy summer

for Alex Sborov. The sophomore golfer of Foothill-Pleasanton will be logging plenty of miles to participate in golf tournaments over the next few months.

She got a head start on her summer plans, though, when she attended the Under Armour Hunter Mahan Championship at Gleneagles Country Club in Plano, TX, on April 15-17.

“(That tournament) is harder to get into,” Sborov said of the American Ju-nior Golf Association event in Texas. “Only 21 girls are in it. Some of my friends were playing in it from SoCal.”

It didn’t prove to be her best weekend on the course, taking 19th after posting a 54-hole score of 249. But it’s not stopping her from lining up more top-tier events to compete in over the next couple months.

Sborov will also play in the U.S. Open Qualifier in Lake Merced in late May and the California Junior Girls State Championship at Monterey Peninsula Country Club on June 27-30 amongst others.

Sborov is most excited about the latter, since it’s match play.

“I love match play because I’m a really fierce competitor,” Sborov said. “I’m really competitive, I love being face to face with my opponent.” ✪

By ERIK STORDAHL | SportStars

Sborov Snippets

Monterey Peninsula CC

best golf course you’ve played

Favorite energy foodPistachios

best tournament finish1-under at a 36-hole tourney at Poppy Ridge

54Anne Hathaway

how many holes do you play a week?

Celebrity you’d like to hang out with for a day

an animal you most associate with?Tiger, because I’m so competitive

Butch Noble

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19SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

tee2green

One of the things that I love about The First Tee of San Jose is our effort to provide opportunities to all youth regardless of their background. By opportunities, I mean those to learn valu-able life lessons, to play the game of golf, and to have some really incredible experiences. The young people who have remained in our program for several years have grown in char-acter to a point that they then give back as volunteer coaches and may even be richly rewarded.

The First Tee of San Jose is very pleased to be sending Kunal Shalia, who is one of our finest, to The First Tee Training Program at Hank Haney’s International Golf Academy this summer. We are so proud of Kunal for being selected as one of only 39 participants nationwide.

The event, held June 12-18 in Hilton Head Island, South Carolina, will include daily instruction with Hank Haney IJGA Instructors on all aspects of the golf game. Mental training, fitness training and college placement sessions will also be held. I’m sure Kunal will return eager to share about this wonderful experience with his golf teammates at Evergreen Valley High and friends at The First Tee of San Jose.

Life skill development is the main emphasis at The First Tee of San Jose. Kunal’s selection to attend the Hank Haney program was based in very large part on his ability to demon-strate his positive character development. Parents throughout The First Tee network of chapters report growth of their children because of our programs.

Summer is a great time to take a class or camp. Summer registration for The First Tee of San Jose begins online on Tuesday, May 10th for classes and camps beginning in as early as mid-June. Join us!First Tee Files is a rotating column featuring the executive directors of four Bay Area chapters of The First Tee — Contra Costa, Oakland, San Jose and Tri-Valley. George Maxe is the Executive Director of the First Tee San Jose. Check out your local chapter by visiting one of the following websites: www.The-FirstTeeContraCosta.org, www.TheFirstTeeOakland.org, www.TheFirstTeeSanJose.org and www.TheFirstTeeTriValley.org.

First tee of San Jose participant earns invite to elite golf academy

George maxeFirst tee Files

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Tim

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21SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

Kelly Jasso, in her fifth year as coach, is of course happy to be winning games and having her program recognized as one of the best around, but that’s not why she coaches.

“It’s about finding strong female role models for our young women,” she said. “I’m a huge advocate for my girls.

“The kids work so hard — so much is asked of them academically, too.”Jasso asks a lot of herself, especially now that she has 1-year-old twins Everly

and Whit to go along with her full-time job at Pepsico. This year, though, is a little easier than last, because Jasso delivered those twins in the middle of the season.

After handling Dougherty Valley 15-3 last spring — a typically one-sided win for Acalanes in the DFAL — Jasso thought everything was fine.

“I went to my weekly doctor’s appointment the next day, and they said ‘Next week’,” she said. “But then my platelet count was low and they said ‘Right now’.”

So Jasso had a C-section that afternoon, delivered her twins, and two weeks later she was back on the sidelines when the Dons knocked off Campolindo.

Obviously, Jasso has a commitment to her team and a drive to compete,

both of which were nurtured in her high school and college lacrosse career in New York. (Lacrosse, despite its growing popularity here, is still dominated by Northeastern teams.) She moved to San Diego and started coaching the junior varsity at Coronado High School before relocating to the Bay Area and landing at Acalanes.

But Jasso is careful not to take credit for the success story in Lafayette. “It would be foolish to say it’s me,” she said. “The (lacrosse) clubs are creating

the environment — and my program is great because I had a couple years when I had a strong freshman class.”

In fact, three of the nine seniors on this year’s team played on varsity as fresh-men, and their experience has been a key factor in the team’s success.

But part of being successful as a lacrosse coach is teaching novices the game. Given the nature of American sports, kids start to zero in on one or two sports early on, and don’t always try new things.

“They have to specialize at such a young age,” said Jasso, and though some choose lacrosse, many who play the sport in high school don’t have much ex-perience with it.

“If you get a good athlete,” said Jasso, “you can build a player” — in part be-cause they don’t have bad habits to break.

A perennial stalwart in its league, Acalanes girls lacrosse is set up for a run at a section title

By CLAY KALLAM | ContributorlEFT: Acalanes’ Niki Quinn tries to move around Dougherty

Valley’s Lauren Jarvis during their game on May 3. AbOVE: The Dons’ senior middle,

Elizabeth Landry (left), makes a pass

as she avoids a pack of Dougherty Valley

defenders. Landry will play at UC Davis next

year.

Photos by Bob Larson

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23SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™

“If you get a basketball player, you get the best defensive footwork you’re going to see. If you get a soccer player, you get a player who understands angles on the field.”

Elizabeth Landry, a senior midfielder who will play for UC Davis next year, started in soc-cer before switching to lacrosse in sixth grade.

“There’s definitely a connection,” she said, “Especially in midfield. You constantly run back and forth from offense to defense.”

On the boys’ side, a football player who un-derstands contact might help a lacrosse team, but the rules are different for the girls, and body-checking is not allowed.

“There is checking in girls’ lacrosse,” Jasso quickly clarified, “but it’s a finesse game. I think the game is progressing without body-checking.”

“Girls’ lacrosse is good the way it is right now,” said Landry. “The girls’ game is more about speed and skills.”

Nonetheless, there is contact, and Jasso can see the game getting more physical.

“You have to be comfortable with getting close to the offensive players if you want to stop them,” she said. “It’s becoming more like the boys’ game,” something Landry wouldn’t be that excited about.

“It’s a lot more aggressive,” said Landry about the male version of the sport. “It would be fun for a day to play boys’ lacrosse — but only for a day.”

But as the game evolves, it’s getting more

physical, just as it gets more physical in col-lege. Jasso was excited at the chance for her girls to see some topflight NCAA teams at St. Mary’s College, where they got a good look at the most up-to-date West Coast lacrosse.

Though the Bay Area version has a ways to go before it catches up to the Northeast, Jasso is optimistic the gap is narrowing.

“In the five years I’ve been coaching here, I’ve seen the sport come a long way,” she said.

Unfortunately, that progress has not been even. Though there are more strong pro-grams in the area, there is still a wide gap be-tween the top teams and those still building a program.

“I always get asked ‘Why do you schedule the hard teams at the start of the season?’” Jasso said, but it’s because the Dons haven’t lost a DFAL game in three years. “It’s so hard to play 12 games against weaker opposition,” and she wishes the league played a single round-robin instead of a double round-robin. As it is, 12 of her 20 allotted games must be against DFAL teams that Acalanes has little trouble beating, as league scores such as 22-5, 17-3 and 17-0 suggest. The closest games have been two three-goal wins over Miramonte.

“Everyone’s scared of them because they’re so talked-up,” said Chloe Hull, an attacker for Campolindo. “They’re really tall — you have trouble defending because they can see over you.”

“They’re really aggressive,” added Amanda

Forshay, a Campolindo defender, “and they have really good midfielders.”

That relatively weak league competition has not prepared Acalanes for postseason play, which has been a problem in the past.

“It hurts us,” said Landry. “We’re not used to the level of play we see in NCS.”

This year, though, Jasso is hopeful that it will all come together for the Dons in the NCS playoffs. “It would be great to win an NCS title,” said Jasso. “I have nine seniors and this group has been playing together for a long time. They work hard and they deserve it.”

“If we ever want to win it,” said Landry, “now is our chance.”

It will be a little easier in 2011, as for the first time, NCS has split lacrosse into two di-

visions, with Acalanes falling into Division II, away from perennial powers Carondelet and Monte Vista. That doesn’t mean it’s a free ride, though, as Marin Catholic-Kentfield is also an outstanding team. The Wildcats have lost only once, to St. Ignatius-S.F. by two, and the Dons lost to S.I. by seven.

Davis (which plays in NCS because the Sac-Joaquin Section doesn’t have postseason lacrosse) and Miramonte are also strong pro-grams, but even if Acalanes falls short, Jasso won’t necessarily be disappointed.

For Jasso, the sport is a medium that allows the growth of girls into young women. “This is someplace they can feel really strong,” she said. “My goal is to have these girls find their voice.” ✪

May 12, 2011

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If you’re like me, you’ve been listening to the sports news every day about the state of football.

Is there going to be an NFL season? Is there a lockout? Has it been lifted? Who drafted whom? With all these stories there is one that may

have slid past you last month. A study was published in which it was reported that youth football injuries are on the rise. It garnered extra attention with a Nationwide Children’s Hospital news release in mid-April.

I am not bringing this to the attention of the reading parents, coaches and kids because I am looking to start a movement against football. Instead I am bringing this to the forefront to revisit key points about injuries. First let’s talk about some of the statistics from the study:

■ Nearly 2,000 pediatric and adolescent football-related injuries treated every day in emergency departments during football season.

■ 31% of these injuries were sprains and strains, 28% were fractures and dislocations, 24% were soft tissue injuries.

■ A majority of the injuries, 78%, were in players ages 12-17.

There are the numbers, plain and simple. So what can

we do to help awareness and prevent minor injuries from becoming major ones?

It is important to remember that injuries aren’t just part of the game. As a player, don’t play hurt. Don’t try to shake

off an injury just to get back into practice or the game. Do a proper warm-up before engaging in your sport. Most important to remember is with proper coaching and equipment the risk is minimized. When all this happens and an injury still occurs, here are some things not to ignore with a sports-related injury:

■ Joint pain — Any joint pain particularly in the knee, ankle, elbow and wrist should never be ignored.

■ Tenderness at a specific point — Be aware of any injury eliciting pain at a specific point in bone, muscle or joint by pressing on it. Espe-cially if the pain is different than what you feel when pressing on the opposite side.

■ Swelling — This is usually coupled with pain, redness and heat. If it is within a joint it may have pain, stiffness and a clicking or popping sound.

■ Limited range of motion — Seek attention if there is an observable loss of range in comparison to the other side.

■ Comparative weakness — This describes a difference in ability to support your weight on a certain side of your body.

■ Numbness and tingling — Never ignore numbness or tingling. This may indicate a serious injury and should always be seen by a physician.

If you suffer any of these indicators of a serious injury, you should be seen by a physician.

Tom Clennell is a physical therapist for the Sports Medicine For Young Athletes, a division of Children’s Hospital Oak-land with a facility also located in Walnut Creek. If you have questions or comments regarding the “Health Watch” column, write the Sports Medicine For Young Athletes staff at [email protected].

May 12, 2011

health watchtom Clennell

Factors, symptoms to help determine severity of injury

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25SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

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endurance | outdoors | adventure

Pacific Crest Trail Association

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27SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

Tim Ritter is gone. If you know him, and need to reach him, well, you

could be waiting for quite some time. The Concord native and 2005 Clayton Valley High graduate

is out for a hike. And he won’t be back until early October. Ritter began a trek May 8 at the California-Mexico border

and headed north on the immensely popular — but seldom hiked all the way through — Pacific Crest Trail. In addition to five months, he will be traversing more than 2,600 miles of trail before reaching the end, which goes comes nine miles into British Columbia at Manning Provincial Park.

Tim Ritter is not crazy. And he did not lose a bet. He just really likes to hike. “This is pretty much a bucket list item for me,” said Ritter,

who prior to this walk had gone on a maximum-length hike of just six nights. “I’ve been around this stuff all my life. My parents are both very into the outdoors and the mountains. ... When I was 15, I read about the Continental Divide Trail and it sort of set my mind in motion about trying to do something big like this.”

His mind was still spinning about these things just a few month ago as he interned for an accounting firm following his graduation from UC Santa Barbara last spring.

“As soon as I started the job I started thinking about what I was going to do when the job was over,” Ritter admitted.

When the internship ended, Ritter knew that regardless of whether he earned a full-time job or not, he would have a de-cent stretch of time before he’d need to go back to sitting be-hind a desk. And so the trip-planning began.

tim ritter is dedicatedRitter knew it was going to be tough to get a lot of trail training in while work-

ing 55 hours a week in the accounting field. But that didn’t stop him from finding time to run the stairs of Hughes Stadium on the campus Sacramento City Col-lege. It also didn’t keep him from countless hours of logistical planning.

“You’re literally needing to plan five months ahead,” Ritter said. “The logistics take a long time to work out. That’s why you’ll sometimes hear hikers make the remark that It actually takes longer to plan for the hike, than complete the hike.”

Ritter’s backpack weighs approximately 21-22 pounds without food and water. As of his departure date of May 8, he had set it up to receive 27 re-supply ship-ments during the course of the odyssey. And while the physical rigors of hiking more than 2,600 miles of trail are sure to be daunting, Ritter was more than knowledgable about the mental challenges of taking on such an endeavor, and doing it solo.

“That’s five months on your own, that can be a long time,” Ritter said. “The mental fatigue can be just as straining as the physical. I’m conscious of that, and I’ve spent long stretches at a time on my own before so I’m confident I’ll be able to handle it.”

However, it’s not like the terrain is going to be boring.According to the website for the Pacific Crest Trail Association, the PCT

climbs nearly 60 major mountain passes over its three-state span (California, Or-egon and Washington). It descends into 19 major canyons and passes more than 1,000 lakes. The trail also includes three national monuments, seven national parks, 24 national forests and 33 federally mandated wildernesses.

The trail’s highest point also happens to be very near the highest point any-where in the 48 states — California’s Mt. Whitney at 14,505 feet.

“The trail itself doesn’t go to the top of Mt. Whitney,” Ritter said. “But it goes

right by the top. Basically, close enough that you’d be crazy not to go to the top.”

tim ritter isn’t just out for himselfThis may be his bucket list hike, but Ritter wanted it to benefit more than just

himself. Once he determined that he was really going to do it, he began research-ing through travel journals and hiking blogs. While doing so, he read of hikers and cyclists who have done similar journeys and earned money for charities by having their hike sponsored.

But Ritter took it even one step further. He began his own charity organiza-tion — one that would appeal to future hiker and outdoor enthusiasts much like himself.

“I decided I wanted to start an organization that would provide the platform for myself and others to do similar events,” he said. “It all happened pretty quick-ly.”

What happened was the founding of Walking For Their Water — a non-profit organization with a goal to sponsor individuals in the performance of outdoor adventure-based fundraising endeavors, with a primary focus on raising aware-ness and inspiring donations for the development of global clean water access. On this particular trek, Tim expects to raise approximately $20,000 to help the production of wells in Haiti.

“I think that’s the most urgent need in the world,” Ritter said regarding the global water crisis. “The money put toward that cause, will directly help and save lives.”

Furthermore, Ritter liked the connection of his hikes being fueled by water and the search for the next water source. According to the PCTA website, there are multiple California stretches of the trail that span 20-30 miles between water sources.

Ritter projects to finish his hike in British Columbia on Oct. 7. He’ll turn 24 during his hike, so if for those who might have birthday wishes, save them.

Because Tim Ritter is gone. ✪

Tim Ritter is taking on the entire Pacific Crest Trail to benefit a charity he created

tim’S trail taleSThanks to some im-pressive tech gadgets, Tim is hoping to keep TriSTARS abreast of his progress along the Pacific Crest Trail. Each issue, we’ll unveil his most recent loca-tion along the PCT and hopefully be able to pass along his newest adventures.

Bob LarsonTim Ritter knew he wanted to take an epic thru-hike when he was a young teenager and learned about the

famous Continental Divide Trail that spans from the Southern New Mexico border to the Canadian border of Montana, traversing the Rocky Mountains along the way.

By CHACE bRysON | EditorGONE

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28 SportStars™ Upload photos and team stats! www.SportStarsMag.comMay 12, 2011

The SportStars team went down to take in its first AVIA Wildflowers Triathlon experience and came back with a few notes on some Bay Area particpants, as well as some striking pictures from the event.

kid Cover Mark Kolding was still trying to adjust to the popularity of being the

SportStars Magazine cover athlete when he toed the line for the collegiate race of the Olympic Course at the Wildflower Triathlon on May 1. And despite having not done any type of major swim length in a triathlon, the El Cerrito native and current UC Davis freshman held his own as he finished 47th among all college males. His time was 2:31.27

if dad Can do it ...Sunnyvale’s Frederika Weitzel, 11, competed in the U12 division of

the Mountain Bike Race in what was her third trip to Wildflower. After a second-place in the division a year ago, she grabbed first in 2011 with a time of 1:44.49. Afterward, Weitzel — who runs for Team in Training — listed her dad as her inspiration. Her dad, Jens, is a cancer survivor who remains a triathlete. He competed in the Long Course and finished in a time of 7:08.05.

runnin’ rollosThe Rollo Family of Alamo made another strong showing at the Wild-

flower. Especially the youngest of the clan, 14-year-old, Jake . He not only finished first in the male 13-15 age group in the Mountain Bike race in a time of of 59:47, but then he finished tops in his class in the Olympic Distance race, finishing in 2:26.22. His older sister, Emily (16 years-old) fin-ished fifth in the female 16-19 age group of the Olympic Distance race. Her time was 3:27.48. Their dad, Jason, completed the long course in 7:20.05.

weekend at wildflower

Butch NobleuPPER lEFT: Members of the Cal-Berkeley triathlon club team stop for a quick group portrait.

bOTTOm lEFT: Several participants make their mad

dash to the water as the Olympic distance race begins

for the collegiate male division. AbOVE: UC Davis freshman

Mark Kolding sheds his wet suit and grabs the bike during the

Olympic distance race.

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When John Jones was hired to take over the Las Lomas High baseball program two years ago, it seems as though it was a case or right place, right time — right neighbor.

Jones an Oakland native who attended Skyline High and eventually spent four years as a corner infielder in the A’s organization, had only recently moved back to the Bay Area with his wife. He happened to move onto the same street as scott Pope. As it turned out, Pope had a son named Michael who played baseball.

One thing led to another and now Michael Pope is a key contributor on a Knights team that Jones has rebuilt into a Diablo Foothill Athletic League title contender in just his sec-ond year at the helm.

“Just making them believe in themselves,” Jones said of his first step after taking over the program last year following a 5-19 finish by the Knights in 2009. “There was a lot of doubt after that season. The senior group that I had last year, had guys like Thomas Maiuri and Alex Toriggino. They wanted to win, and said ‘I wantto turn this program around.’ I think it rubbed off on the guys that are here now.”

The 2010 team was the only DFAL team to miss the postseason a year ago, but it still doubled its win total from a year before and finished at a respectable 10-12. That positive momentum carried the team into this season and manifested into a 12-7-1 as the Knights entered a May 10 game against visiting Dublin.

Perhaps more impressive than the 12 wins is that the Knights moved into sole possession of second place in the DFAL with a 2-1 come-from-behind victory over Miramonte on May 5. They started the week of May 10 just one and a half games back of Campolindo (though just one game back in the loss column), and they’ll still have one more game against the Cougars at Campolindo on May 17.

The 2-1 win over Miramonte was also significant in that it moved Las Lomas’ records in one-run games this season to a staggering 6-1.

“It probably could very well be 1-6, but it’s a good statistic,” Jones said. “They’re winning baseball games. Those are good, tight, close games, and the type of games where you find out what you’re made of.

“We can only do so much as coaches to teach and get them ready. When the games are tight and you’re down by one or two, that’s when you find out what you’re made of. And they’re responding.”

In addition to Pope who has used his arm and bat to help the Knights, Las Lomas has key contributions from other players such as logan Frandsen, Jake Villa, Jack Bevan, Lucas Hill and zac gainor.

Gainor had the game-winning hit in the 2-1 win over Miramonte, but it’s been his ability to step in as the team’s No. 2 starting pitcher that has really been a pleasant surprise for Jones. The junior left-hander assumed the role in late March when teammate Will Sheifer was sidelined with a broken jaw after being hit in the face with a ball during a batting cage workout.

“He’s been outstanding,” Jones said of Gainor’s work on the mound. “He took over that role and has really run with it.”

The Miramonte win assured the Knights of being eligible

May 12, 2011

extra bases

By CHACE bRysON | Editor

knight stalkers: las lomas baseball creeps up standings

Jonathan HawthorneAbOVE: The Knights’ No. 1 starter Michael Pope

delivers a pitch during the team’s 2-1 win over Miramonte on May 5. Pope earned the victory

with a complete-game effort in which he struck out nine and walked two. RigHT: Zac Gainor delivered

the game-winning hit in the same victory over Miramonte. He finished the game 2-for-3.

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31SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

extra bases

for the North Coast Section Division II playoffs. And as Jones prepared for the last four games on the regular season schedule, it was clear that wherever the season went from that point was going to OK.

“Win or lose those games, I’m thrilled with where we’re at

right now,” Jones said. “We’re a very disciplined team. The kids have done a good job of soaking in what I can teach them. My teaching are simple. It’s baseball. It’s a game. Right now, these guys are just seeing what can happen, when they put their focus in and give a good effort.” ✪

NorCal baseball top 15Records are through May 7. Teams from

the Central Section are not considered.1. Archbishop Mitty-San Jose ........................ 22-42. St. Francis-Mountain View ......................... 22-53. Alameda ...................................................... 19-14. Elk Grove .................................................... 20-55. De La Salle-Concord .................................. 15-56. Monte Vista-Danville .................................. 15-57. St. Mary’s-Stockton .................................... 17-88. Wilcox-Santa Clara .................................... 24-59. San Ramon Valley-Danville ....................... 15-410. Turlock ...................................................... 19-511. Jesuit-Carmichael .................................... 19-712. Clayton Valley-Concord ........................16-3-213. James Logan-Union City ......................... 17-314. Pleasant Grove-Elk Grove ....................... 19-6 15. Davis ......................................................20-4-1

For the NorCal Softball 15, flip to Lockerroom on page 9

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Someone asked me about hypertrophy training for young athletes the other day. It was a simple enough question

and one that I think a lot of people tend to misunderstand.

Hypertrophy training, if you are unsure, is the action of lifting weights with the sole intension of ‘getting bigger’. And the question was simply this — Should young athletes concentrate on hypertrophy-based training. The answer, much like the question, couldn’t be simpler: No!

Any type of over-concentra-tion on one aspect of training will almost always mean that you are ignoring other, equally-important parts.

Proper and quality-driven athletic development means that trainers are providing an environment for young athletes in which ALL important factors related to sports performance and injury prevention are being developed.

Being ‘BIG’ doesn’t mean being ‘STRONG’. Gaining muscle is a specific type of training that leads to a specific type of result. And virtually nowhere in sport does the relative

size of your bicep muscle mean a thing with respect to performance or injury prevention.

Focusing on ONE thing means you are missing everything else. What are the true important aspects to sports performance?

Strength. Speed. Mobility. Movement Economy or Agility. Flexibility. Coordination.

All of these elements must be present and optimally developed for a young athlete to excel.

If you are concentrating on making your young athletes ‘bigger’, than you are most cer-tainly missing other elements of physical ability that are MUSTS in terms of the athlete’s athletic performance.

In 10 years of working with young athletes, I can say that no

matter what strength training program a teen-ager is doing, they are going to get ‘bigger.’ They may not become ‘monsters’ or have to wear sleeveless t-shirts because of the excess girth in their arms, but they will get bigger.

The teenage years represent a time in life during which testosterone becomes more readily available in the body. That, combined with the natural growing process means that muscles will fill out and ‘inches’ will be added in terms of quality lean tissue gain.

Gaining size isn’t just about time in the weight room. In fact, it’s only a small per-centage about that. True lean muscle mass is gained from a specific nutritional process that requires so many calories of food com-ing from the various macro-nutrients.

Muscle gain response will come from virtually any type of strength training, but traditionally when people hear the word ‘hy-pertrophy’, they think about the gorilla-sized body builder doing endless sets and reps of specific, single-joint exercises such as Bicep curls, Triceps extensions and leg extensions.

Not only is this kind of single-joint activ-ity potentially dangerous and certainly not usable from a sporting perspective (because compound movements that involve multiple joints and muscles is where it’s at), but the reps associated with this kind of lifting are most typically performed slowly.

So in the end, you will have a ‘big’ line-backer who is slower than cold molasses running up a hill. Train slow, be slow. It’s that simple. Remember, don’t think in one di-mension when it comes to developing young athletes. Especially a dimension that involves worrying about being ‘big’. ✪Tim Rudd is an International Youth Condition-ing Association specialist in youth condition-ing (level 3), speed and agility (level 2), and nutrition specialist (level 1). You can contact him at [email protected].

May 12, 2011

tim rudd for iYCa training time

Focus on getting strong and agile, not just big

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camps + clinics

bAsEbAll/sOFTbAll Golden Era Baseball Based in the East Bay, we offer several instructional-based programs as well as 9U thru 18U Club Teams. We are currently taking sign-ups for our Spring Hitting Classes. Please see our website for full details: www.GoldenEraBaseball.com The Pitching Center We develop baseball players to their full potential. The Pitching Center has grown to become the Total Player Center (TPC), a full-service baseball and softball training academy. Age- and skill-specific programs are available for students ages 8 – High School. Info: 925-416-1600, thepitchingcenter. com Cabernet Baseball Club The Livermore-based club hosts Lil’ Baseball Clinics, ongoing through May 14 for ages 3-7. For more information, please call 925-416-1600, or go line to www.thepitchingcenter.com.SportFormBased in Concord, SportForm provides individual & team instruction in baseball, softball, lacrosse. Highly trained pros provide accelerated and advanced skills clinics. Prepare to Perform! Info: 925-459-2880. BASKETBALL Saint Mary’s College camps Spend your June and July learning fundamentals or honing your skills at McKeon Pavilion. Plenty of options are available. Registration and info: 925-631-4386, smccamps@stmarys- ca.edu; www.smcgaels.com. CHEER CheerGyms.com We offer the best clinics in California! Customize your clinic to fit your needs from basic stunting techniques or working on twist cradles out of one leg stunts, we take your team to the next level! Info: 866-685-7615, www. CheerGyms.com East Bay Sports Academy Recreational, competitive athletes benefit from training with the best coaches. Our 10,000 sq. foot facility is clean and bright with the newest equipment. Info: (925) 680-9999, www.EastBaySportsAcademy.com.

EQUESTRIAN Earthquake Arabians We are hosting camps throughout spring and summer at their facility in the Morgan Territory. Camps are June 13-17 and June 20-24. Size is limited so sign up now! Info/Registration: 925-360-7454 or www.EarthquakeArabians.com for more info. Kelly Maddox Riding Academy Develop new friendships with other horse-crazy kids. Weekly activities include learning horse colors, markings and breeds; arts and crafts; a farrier demonstration and human horse show; bareback riding and more! Info: 925-575- 4818, www.KellyMaddoxTraining.com Franklin Canyon Stables Based in Martinez, we provide two covered arenas and easy access to trails. Beginning riders or experienced equestrians, we have a place for you. Instruction in horsemanship on the ground and in the saddle while having fun. Info: 925- 228-1801; www.kimshorsetraining.com/franklin_canyon.htmlCastle Rock ArabiansActivities for tweens and teenagers, where we build team spirit through various team activities on horseback. Visit the ranch by appointment. Info: 925-933-3701, www. castlerockarabians.com FiTNEss Children’s HospitalThe “Sport Speed Camp” presented by the Children’s Hospital Oakland Sports Medicine is being held in three two-week sessions: June 20-July 1, July 11-22, and Aug. 1-12. All camp sessions are Monday-Friday from 2-4 p.m. The camp will be at the Derby Street Athletic Field, 1900 Derby Street, Berkeley. Cost is just $250 per athlete and space is limited to 25 athletes per camp session. Info/Registration: call 510-428-3558 and hit option 3.Fit 2 The Core As a Youth Conditioning, Speed/Agility and Nutrition Specialist with the IYCA, Fit- 2-The-Core Training Systems offers an innovative approach to getting young athletes back on the field post-rehabilitation, and continuing the process by progressing their bodies to handle what they must endure on the field or court. Info: 925- 639-0907. Walnut Creek Sports & Fitness We offer over 70 group classes per week. Members also enjoy our heated

pool, sauna, spa, and steam-room. Massage, skincare and chiropractic services are available. Call us today for your free week pass! Info: 925-932-6400, www.wcsf.net ENRiCHmENT Dianne Adair Programs We offer a wide variety of enrichment programs for your child, during the school year and throughout summer. Activities include: Home work help, 4th & Up Club, art and crafts, science, sports, and games. Summer camps include weekly field trips. Info: www. dianneadair.org. E.Nopi and Palm Academy Palm Academy’s “Summer Camp Spectacular” offers day camps with one-week or one- day programs to provide the flexibility for your busy schedule. Abrakadoodle Art Camps inspire kids to reach beyond and create art that is unique to them. Info: Palm Academy, Fremont, (510) 979-9794 or E.Nopi, Newark, (510)79ENOPI (36674)FOOTbAll NorCal Football Camps Led by Marin Catholic High coach, Ken Peralta (San Francisco 49ers High School Coach of the Year,) Camps serve youth ages of 7- 14. We help each child reach his full potential as a football player and young person. Info: 650-245-3608 . www. norcalfootballcamps.comgOlF Coach Rick Golf Learn to play on the course, where it matters with Coach Rick! Golfers of all ages can sign up for clinics offered by Coach Rick starting now throughout summer. Info: (510) 917-6442 • www. ThePersonalGolfCoach.com The First Tee-Contra Costa The First Tee Summer Camp is a youth development program for boys and girls 7-18. Participants learn about golf and life skills and values inherent to the game, rules and etiquette. Summer camps at Diablo Creek Golf Course in Concord. Info: www.thefirstteecontracosta.org; [email protected] or 925-686-6262 x0.The First Tee-Oakland The First Tee of Oakland has delivered The First Tee Life Skills Experience to over 262 participants. Each receive a min. 12 hours of instruction over an 8-week period. Instruction is at three Oakland courses: Metropolitan Golf Links, Lake Chabot GC

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35SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

camps + clinicsand Montclair GC. Info: 510-352-2002; www. thefirstteeoakland.org. The First Tee-San Jose The First Tee of San Jose develops youth through the game of golf throughout Silicon Valley. Participants learn to appreciate diversity, resolve conflicts, build confidence and set goals. We welcome participants ranging from second to twelfth grade. Scholarships available. Info: 408-288-2973; www. thefirstteesanjose.org. The First Tee-Tri-Valley The First Tee of the Tri-Valley offers seasonal The First Tee Life Skills Experience Classes and Summer Camps for ages 7-17, held at the Pleasanton Golf Center on the Alameda County Fairgrounds. Summer classes begin on June 14. Junior Golf Summer Camps are held weekly. Info: 925.462.7201, www. TheFirstTeeTriValley.org lACROssEAtherton lacrosseOur lacrosse camps are designed for boys and girls ages 5-14, who are beginner or intermediate players. Our group of coaches and staff are leaders in the lacrosse community. Info: 888- 526-3330, www.AthertonLacrosse.com. Vitality LacrosseVitality offers summer league programs in four Bay Area regions, all of which come together on July 30 for the Bay Area Summer League Championships on Treasure Island. Locations include: Marin

County, Peninsula, East Bay and Petaluma. League runs six weeks starting June 20. Info: 888-501-4999, www.VitalityLacrosse.com. mARTiAl ARTs United States Karate Systems Adult and children’s programs, kick box fitness, mixed martial arts. Providing excellence in martial arts instruction and services for the entire family. 925-682- 9517; www.usksmartialarts.com OuTdOOR sPORTs Bear Valley Mountain Bear Valley has six camps with multiple sessions including: Soccer, Archery, Tennis, Climbing, Cycling and Day Camp. Summer Camps offer outdoor rec programs for the whole family; overnight resident skill camps and day camps, too. Age groups and activities vary by camp. Info: www.bearvalley.com TENNis Summer Tennis at Valley VistaClubSport Valley Vista has successfully hosted summer tennis camps in Walnut Creek for more than 30 years, with expert instruction. Info: 925-934-4050, www.clubsports.comVOllEybAll Pacific Rim Volleyball We offer several skill-based camps and clinics, including setting camp, hitting camp and an all-skills camp. Campers will be evaluated and placed in a group that

challenges their level of play. Registration for beach volleyball is going on now as well. Info: www. pacificrimvolleyball.com WREsTliNg Community Youth Center The CYC in Concord offers three types of week-long wrestling camps. Elementary Camp for ages 5-10 runs July 5-8. All Corners Camp for ages 11-18 runs July 18-22, and Advanced Camp serves the same age group and runs Aug. 8-12. Camps are 9 a.m.-3 p.m. daily at the CYC. Info: 925-671-7070, Ext. 229, www.communityyouthcenter.com.MULTI-SPORT Cal Athletic Camps Cal Camps are offered in a variety of sports for girls and boys 5-19, with week-long, half-day, full-day and overnight options, and several choices for adults. Most camps take place on campus in Berkeley from June through August. Camp sports include: baseball, basketball, rowing/crew, field hockey, football, golf, rugby, soccer, strength & conditioning, swimming, tennis, volleyball and water polo. Info [email protected]. Renaissance ClubSport Spring and summer Sports camps are led by seasoned directors. Sports Day Camp is for children 5-12 and focuses on a different sport each day including: football, soccer, swimming, basketball, bocce, kickball, racquetball and karate. Summer camps run June 13 thru Aug. 19. Info: 925-942-6344. www.clubsports.com

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impulse

eat right, get chargedHave you ever gotten to the starting line of a race with

your legs feeling like sandbags, your arms like jello and your head like leftover mashed potatoes? Dude! You need to eat better! Prepping for a race is almost as important as the race itself. Make sure you’re eating the good stuff.

We suggest chucking those candy bars and po-tato chips and saddling up with Arma Energy. Packed to the gills with carbs, energy and protein, Arma comes fully equipped for battle on the course with the F-Bomb (fruit mix), C4 (chocolate caramel cookie caffeine mix), T-Bomb (trail mix), and RPG (granola and chocolate chip mix). Down your favorite, get in game mode and tear up the course. Hit up www.armaenergysnx.com to get yours now.

mr. FancypantsWhoever said “Shoes make the man” must’ve never

been a fashion icon. Or maybe they had never owned a pair of Levi’s before. When your friends feast their eyes on your new duds from Levi’s, you will be THE man. The great thing is that there are tons of styles to choose from. Let us help walk you through the fashion streets of today’s trends. The 501: the first. The one and only. The original. You get the picture. You can wear these jeans anywhere for any reason. We suggest snatching up a couple pairs. The 505: Got a hot date for Saturday night? No? No biggie. Cruise the town with your mad chill bros and become the life of the party with these jeans. The 514: A skinny fit, but not just for skinny dudes. These jeans are the hippest of the bunch and are perfect for those semi-casual to semi-formal gatherings. Hit up www.levis.com to get your jeans now.

today’s diggs with yesterday’s styleHit up the dirt and tear up the trails

with the Oakley Retro V LS jersey. This retro fit jersey with a style from yesteryear is one of the freshest items on the market right now. The lab techs at Oakley really geeked out on this one as it comes packed with antibacte-rial action, moisture wicking and UV protection. Basically, you won’t sweat and smell like the rest of the field. The Retro V LS jersey is ideal for the mountains and can be used in competition or just bummin’ around town.

hold everythingWith the Oakley Tool Pocket Back-

pack, you can store enough gadgets and gizmos to survive in the wild all on your own. Seriously, you could be a modern Robinson Crusoe with the plethora of materials carried in this trendy pack. It’s lightweight, feathery feature looks like it’s meant for just toting a couple books to homeroom but don’t be fooled! It’s got enough compartments to put the Library of Congress to shame. Store tools, water bottles, bug spray, knives, magazines, food, cell phone and maybe even a fax machine.

the best racing glovesTo be the best, you want to wear the

best. So wear the gloves field-tested by the best. Introducing the Oakley Hand Ratchet — simply put, the best. Comprised mainly of sheepskin leather, the Hand Ratchet comes equipped with stretch Kevlar for optimized knuckle protection, Clarino fiber to give the little finger added comfort and lightweight breathable Airm-esh. Wear these gloves and your hands will forget about the rugged, robust terrain you’re shredding and feel like they’re wrapped around silk and velvet for an eternity. To get all these Oakley products now, go to www.oakley.com

a book of epic proportionsToday when we see a pitcher hurl seven strong innings,

we’ll tip our cap to him for an admirable performance. If he throws a complete game shutout, we know he means busi-ness and has all-star potential. But what if someone threw 16 shutout innings? Better yet, what if his opponent did the same? Does that mean the world is upside down? Are pigs flying? Do these pitchers enter some Herculean strato-sphere that no man has ever experienced? Well, you’ll have to ask Juan Marichal and Warren Spahn all about it.

These legends went toe to toe on a cold, windy night on July 2, 1963 and pitched a game for the ages, needless to say. To find out what happened, grab a copy of The Great-est Game Ever Pitched: Juan Marichal, Warren Spahn and the Pitching Duel of the Century, by Jim Kaplan. You can get your copy signed by Juan Marichal at Borders in San Francisco on May 18 and Barnes & Noble in Emeryville on May 19.

Get juicedLook, fueling up is crucial for any stud athlete. And

with a semi-truck full of energy drinks to choose from, it’s almost impossible to pick the right one. For the hip surf-ers, skateboarders, wakeboarders, snowboaders and motocross pros out there, go with grombomb.

This drink is a healthy alternative that will keep you on the podium instead of those sugary, salty, uber-caf-feinated drinks that will land you on the sidelines. Grombomb is made by peeps who are in the thick of all things action and extreme sports — they know what good, healthy energy drinks

taste like and they know what to look for. Seriously, stop wasting your cheddar on stuff that’ll destroy your system and hinder you from hoisting that trophy. Get with grombomb today. Go to www.drink-grombomb.com for more information.

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37SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ May 12, 2011

Pick your favorites and we’ll get you hooked up! ❒ Apparel ❒ Automotive ❒ Camps & Clinics ❒ Endurance/Out-

door/Adventure ❒ Events ❒ Fun/Entertainment ❒ Fundraising ❒ Golf/Tennis ❒ Gyms/Health Clubs ❒ Health & Nutrition ❒ Home Improvement ❒ Martial Arts ❒ Restaurants ❒ Sporting Goods ❒ Teams/Clubs/

Leagues ❒ Travel & Leisure

❒ A A A Northern California, Nevada & Utah ......................... 10

❒ AABCO Printing ........................ 25 ❒ Aviva Promotional Products...... 17 ❒ Back Forty BBQ ......................... 33 ❒ Baseball Batting Cages.Com ..... 30 ❒ Bear Valley Mountain ............... 40 ❒ Big 5 ........................................... 5 ❒ Big C Athletic Club ...................... 5 ❒ Big- O Tires ................................. 2 ❒ Bob Larson Photography .......... 34 ❒ Cabernet Indoor Sports ............. 30 ❒ Cal Athletic Camps .................... 35 ❒ California Adventure Camps...... 34 ❒ Championship Athletic Fundraising ...23 ❒ Cheer Gyms .............................. 12 ❒ Clayton/Countrywood

Fitness Centers.......................... 32 ❒ Club Sport Renaissance ............ 28

❒ Club Sport Valley Vista .............. 16 ❒ Community Youth Center .......... 33 ❒ Crowne Plaza ............................ 25 ❒ Dave Delong School Of Golf ...... 18 ❒ Diablo Car Wash & Detail Center .. 25 ❒ Diablo Grande Golf, Winery &

Resort ....................................... 19 ❒ Diablo Rock Gym....................... 32 ❒ Diablo Trophies & Awards ......... 32 ❒ Dianne Adair Enrichment

Programs .................................. 17 ❒ E Teamsponsor .......................... 39 ❒ E.Nopi ....................................... 35 ❒ Earthquake Arabians ................ 35 ❒ East Bay Sports Academy .......... 24 ❒ Excellence In Sport Performance .... 7 ❒ Farmers Insurance .................... 32 ❒ Fast Break Basketball Camps .... 34 ❒ Fit 2 The Core ............................ 13

❒ Franklin Canyon Golf Course ..... 19 ❒ Franklin Canyon Stables............ 19 ❒ Golden Era Baseball .................. 32 ❒ Greenhorn Creek Golf Club ........ 18 ❒ Heavenly Greens ....................... 29 ❒ Home Team Sports Photography .. 25 ❒ Jory’s Flowers ........................... 30 ❒ Kaiser Permanente ................... 33 ❒ Kelly Maddox Equestrian Training .. 25 ❒ Kinders B B Q ............................ 31 ❒ Lone Tree Golf Course ................ 19 ❒ McCoveys .................................. 31 ❒ Mt. Diablo Soccer ...................... 24 ❒ Norcal Youth Football Camp ...... 35 ❒ Northgate High School ............. 32 ❒ Oakland Athletics ....................... 7 ❒ Pacific Rim Volleyball Academy 25 ❒ Peninsula Building Materials .... 25 ❒ Rocco’s Pizza ............................. 32

❒ Saint Mary’s Athletic Summer Camps ...................................... 35

❒ Sherman Swim School .............. 24 ❒ Sky High Sports ........................ 32 ❒ Smokin Okies B B Q Joint .......... 32 ❒ Sport Clips ................................ 13 ❒ Sports Jam Cabernet: Father’s Day

Free- For- All ............................... 3 ❒ Sports Stars Magazine ................ 4 ❒ Team Zero Video Productions .... 30 ❒ The First Tee Of Contra Costa ..... 19 ❒ The First Tee Of San Jose ........... 19 ❒ The Personal Golf Coach ............ 18 ❒ Tpc / The Pitching Center .......... 25 ❒ USKS Concord ........................... 25 ❒ Velocity Sports Performance ..... 32 ❒ Walnut Creek Sports & Fitness .. 23 ❒ Wingstop Restaurants .............. 22

Page 38: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011

38 SportStars™ Upload photos and team stats! www.SportStarsMag.comMay 12, 2011

Want to submit your pic for Photo Finish? Send it to us at [email protected]. Photos must be 300 dpi and at least 10 inches wide in the jpeg format. Please identify every person in the photo and include your contact information.

Jesuit-Carmichael lacrosse players Frank Olsson (middle) and teammate John Flynn (right) do their best to fire up their team-mates during a break in the action at the Sacramento Valley

Lacrosse Conference final on May 4. The Marauders eventually lost the championship tilt 6-5 to Granite Bay.

PHOTO by CHRis AusTRiA

Page 39: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011
Page 40: EB Issue 23, 05.12.2011