Thursday, June 19, 2025

LJ FB: 2nd in bracket at SDSU Camp

The campus osprey (upper left) keeps an eye out
next to the nest atop the central light standard
during weight-training Wed. morning, June 18.
(Photo by Ed Piper)


By Ed Piper

La Jolla went 5-2 and took second in its bracket at the SDSU Camp in 7-v-7 games June 7-8, according to new DC Randy Cowell.

The Vikings came up against Centennial (Peoria, AZ) in the final, losing that contest on the campus at San Diego State. Cowell is installing new defensive patterns in his role as Defensive Coordinator.

This weekend, June 21-22, the Coach Tyler Roach-led offensive players will go to the USD Camp locally.

Middle linebacker Charlie Martin, sporting a visible 2-to-3-inch vertical scar on the outside of his right wrist from surgery earlier this year, said, "It's getting better. I still can't lift (weights)," as he ramps up with his teammates for the Aug. 22 season opener at Torrey Pines High.

Cowell, the DC, coached at Valley Center for 20 years. He then was an assistant at Escondido Charter most recently.

Roach begins his ninth season at the helm. He served as a defensive assistant at La Jolla prior to that time.

LJ FB: Bear crawls up Rushville St. 6/18

Photos by Ed Piper

Jon Lemery (far left) runs a workout that includes
bear crawls up Rushville St. next to the stadium
at 7:30 in the morning. Lemery is strength
and conditioning coach.

Lunges preceded the bear crawls, both after
a neighborhood run at 7 a.m.


Rising junior Nico Bardaro (C), "Snacks" (R).

Then, backward bear crawls - grueling.

Rising junior Zach "Snacks" Gergurich (R)
has his belt adjusted during morning weight-
lifting.



Monday, June 16, 2025

Adult league baseball: Pete's weekend warriors

 

The Vandals, 43 years old and up, were formed
this spring by Pete Wilkinson (24, front row
middle), who lives in Linda Vista-Clairemont.






Player-manager Pete Wilkinson,
second baseman who grew up
in Redlands. The team plays at
San Pasqual, Orange Glen, and
Escondido high schools
on Sundays.













Saturday, June 14, 2025

NCAA suit settlement: What it means

By Ed Piper

What I've been reading about the settlement in the House vs. NCAA suit will change Division 1 college sports and provide a structure to pay past and present athletes.

The decision, handed down Friday, June 6, stipulates that 22 percent of colleges' athletic revenues will be distributed primarily to football and men's basketball team members--because those are the revenue-producing sports.

A small amount of that money will be split among the remaining sports, including Olympic sports like track.

In addition, past athletes will be paid out of a fund of $2.8 billion over a period of 10 years for their participation from 2016-2025 as a sort of make-up for the NIL (name, image, likeness) endorsement issues.

Beginning July 1, universities can pay current athletes up to a total of $20.5 million in NIL annually.

How do I feel about it? One, universities made billions of dollars off young athletes for decades, which wasn't right. There were cases where a player received a sandwich from a booster when his scholarship stipend ran out in the offseason, and this violated NCAA rules. That was ridiculous.

Another anecdote was from the story of Connie Hawkins, the NBA Phoenix Suns basketball player who was banned from the NBA for a time while he was stuck playing in the old ABA. On college scholarship in Iowa, Hawkins, a 6'8" athlete with tremendous natural talent, was paid for making sure seaweed didn't grow in the school's athletic stadium--obviously, seaweed doesn't encroach on facilities in the Midwest, because the ocean is thousands of miles away.

Do I like young athletes making millions off NIL? No, I'm not thrilled. What sense would you have, without wise family and investment counselors to advise you, at age 18 and a pile of money lands in your lap? Not a pretty picture.

Just take Mikey Williams, the basketball phenom from San Ysidro High. As a high school player, he was living in a million dollar home (I think in Jamul) when friends came up for a visit. Out of jealousy over a girl, he put four bullets into an occupied Tesla. Lawyers worked out a pleaded-out probation so he could move on to play college basketball, where his future is still being decided.

The articles I've read state that smaller colleges--without major football and basketball teams--could benefit by building up teams in lesser-known sports, and thereby prosper in athletics. That may be so.

With roster limits going up to 105 players on D1 football teams and 15 on men's basketball teams, this could drain a lot of the $20.5 million wealthy colleges can pay to their student-athletes.

The lesser sports--non-revenue-producing--could suffer. For example, Long Beach State has a top-flight men's volleyball team that won the NCAA title this year. Its status is in question; where does the program come up with money to pay expenses?

The NCAA doesn't whistle the tune anymore. The conferences, led by the Big 10 and the SEC, are really the movers-and-shakers, as we've seen in the realignment--for gigantic media rights money--the last few years of groupings. The old Pac-10 has dried up and been reborn with lesser teams. The wealthy conferences do whatever they feel in the pursuit of millions and billions of dollars.

Thursday, June 12, 2025

LJ track: Starter King 'was a surfer', CIF champ hurdler

Annie King (far left), the starter, checks the discus
setup before the Vikings' meet April 24 against
Canyon Hills. At far right (behind) stands
La Jolla soph Janae Stanley-Castillo, who
ended up winning the Eastern League title.


By Ed Piper

Serving as the starter for the first time at a track meet at her alma mater, La Jolla High, for the Viking-Canyon Hills meet April 24 was Annie King, who graduated in the LJHS Class of 1981. King was the CIF champion in the 100-meter hurdles.

"I ran hurdles. I was a surfer in those days. I came to campus to run," said King as she arrived early at the meet, checking the discus area that it was shipshape. (I told her I had never seen another starter ever check at a meet that the throws area(s) was set up and in compliance. I am probably wrong, but I never witnessed such an official come by to check on an event on the perimeter.)

It was King's first time serving as the starter at her alma mater, she said. She, not immodestly, responded to this reporter's question, "What did you run?", that she was the CIF champ in the 100-meter hurdles--"the first year," she said, "they had high hurdles".

Annie went on to run at Mesa and UC Irvine. "I met Edwin Moses (legendary Olympic hurdler) in college," she told someone of a similar generation who recognized the name.



Saturday, June 7, 2025

(Unnamed) Stadium: A 'gut-wrenching' experience

My first pancake in 10 days.


By Ed Piper

"You're going on a liquid diet (for stomach troubles)," the doctor in Urgent Care told me. I replied, "Oh, that'll be quite an experience. We're going to (name of Major League ballpark) tomorrow."

And so I did: Driving to an (unnamed) MLB park for a weekday game, 1 p.m. start--most of the driving, especially in traffic, because my wife doesn't do traffic.

What an experience.

We got there in plenty of time. We enjoyed the game, she in Cardinals red hat and "Musial" jersey (3XL, my size, looking like her nightwear, as one fan told us) with "Stan the Man"'s number 6 on the back.

By 6 p.m., stuck in massive traffic, cars barely moving, we finally hit the wall. Dianna hadn't had anything to eat since noon. Me, on a liquid diet--I bought Sprite in a souvenir cup, sipped some (I'm allergic to sugar) and my wife a little, then threw the rest out, keeping the ice and filling the cup with water from the drinking fountain.

I had finished the five or so vegetable-and-fruit pouches I had brought, so I was stranded with nothing else to eat.

I Googled directions to a Vons, we got off the I-5 at Firestone Blvd. in Norwalk--I realizing that I had to break my liquid fast after a day-and-a-half and eat some protein to keep driving--and instead, found a Target.

I ate a peanut butter energy bar, two hard-boiled eggs (finally, proteina (I'm using Spanish). At the Starbucks counter inside Target, Dianna ordered something (I'm having memory-blank-flashback--not really) and I ordered a sausage-egg-cheese breakfast sandwich (at 6:15 at night!).

We sat down and enjoyed them. A few tears, but we had hit the wall and overcome it. We regrouped, there sitting at the table inside Starbucks inside Target.

And that is the story of the first Major League game I have ever gone to on a liquid diet. I looked longingly at Di's cheeseburger she ate at (unnamed) Stadium.

We experienced all of it, and came out alive.

Oh, and by the way, the (unnamed team) came back and won the game, 6-5. Michael Conforto, Italian-American like my wife, struggling at the plate, had a run-producing single in their late rally to help win the game.

Wednesday, June 4, 2025

LJ track: Javelin All-American Mitchell begs to differ

All-American javelin thrower Andrew Mitchell
(second from right, rear), LJ Class of 2017, chats
with athletes and coach before the Vikings'
meet at home against Canyon Hills April 24.
(Photos by Ed Piper


By Ed Piper

"La Jolla (besides having good runners) hasn't had anybody good in the throws until (sophomore) Janae Stanley-Castillo," Viking alumnus Andrew Mitchell was told.

He reacted strongly to that. "I did the throws here (standing on the Edwards Field infield)," Mitchell told a reporter. "I graduated in 2017."

Sorry, never covered him much. The well-proportioned former Viking football player--listed in LJHS football back in 2016 at 6'2", 200 pounds as a lineman--went on to gain NAIA (small college) All-American status at Southern Oregon University.

Andrew, who had been called by a friend to run the discus throw at the La Jolla-Saints-OLP meet March 27, his first time returning to campus in three years, threw the javelin 221'7". He was competing against guys who had been throwing the javelin for years, which he didn't get exposure to during high school. 

In the NAIA national meet at Indiana Wesleyan in Marion, Indiana, last May, "Mitch" also threw the discus. His best mark in that event was 151'5". Those were the two throws he vied in at the nationals.

Best mark in the shot put during college: 45'3.75".

Andrew spread out his college eligibility over seven years during the COVID mess. He attended Mesa College after high school graduation and threw there. He went on to Southern Oregon, where he was a three-time All-American.

Asked what he weighed while throwing the javelin, Mitchell replied 235 pounds. On the football roster at La Jolla High in 2017, his junior year, as a lineman, he was listed at 205 pounds.

Regarding the javelin, he said, "It's hard. I first found it at Mesa. It took a while. It's hard (to do)."

A limitation is space--you need a not of room to throw a javelin, and people can't be in the way. "In California, you're not allowed to throw it in college (or high school)," he said. "Maybe it's okay in club competition."

"I think danger and safety are concerns," he went on. "You're throwing a (sharp) stick in space. In Oregon, it has more space."

Andrew made a funny substitution-of-words when asked how it was visiting his alma mater again. "It's lethargic," he first said. I asked him, "Do you mean there is low energy here?"

He replied, "No, I mix up words sometimes. What's the word? I mean I'm nostalgic" at being on campus again.

During his football-playing years for the Vikings, he played under Coaches Jayson Carter and Matt Morrison. Carter is now associate head coach for Lincoln, a dominant program. Morrison coached one year here, then took his dream job, coaching with his father at his alma mater, Francis Parker, where he had always wanted to coach.

After Morrison left, that meant La Jolla had three different coaches in three seasons. That's a lot of transition and interrupted continuity.

Back in San Diego, living with his godparents in Point Loma, Andrew was hired April 24 as Sea World's head of Environmental Supervision. His major in college was Environmental Science.

After running the discus at his first meet back at LJHS, Mitchell agreed to help out coaching some of the girls and boys in the throws. Hopefully, we'll see more of him in 2026.

Mitchell (left), who starred at La Jolla in football
and track, talks with Annalyse Abrams
before the April 24 meet against Canyon Hills.

Monday, June 2, 2025

LJ baseball: Luke Cripe - the untold story

Junior Luke Cripe (right) receives his 2025
Viking season booklet from head coach
Gary Frank (left) at the team's banquet
Sat., May 31. In the background are
assistants Johnny Agbulos (rear right)
and pitching coach Koa Scott (rear
far left). (Photo by Ed Piper)

By Ed Piper

La Jolla head baseball coach Gary Frank told a story at the team banquet Sat., May 30, that had him dabbing his eyes in emotion.

Luke Cripe, a junior, had had a good offseason preparing and was ready to play in the outfield on the varsity.

In the second game of the season, "Luke was all set to play left field," related Frank. He had had some back issues. Gary said, "We realized that Luke wasn't going to tell us" each time it was an issue.

He was inserted in the lineup, but right before his at-bat, he told the coaches his back was feeling a little tight. Frank had to substitute for him. "I figured he would go home and put some ice on it," to take care of it.

Instead, "Luke propped himself against a wall in the dugout, to get comfortable, and spent the rest of the game involved and cheering on his teammates."

It was, obviously, an occasion that Frank would not forget, and he related that at the breakfast, as individual team members were recognized.

So, even though Luke didn't come back from the injury to play left field every game and pile up statistics, he was still a valuable member of the team. That was the upshot.

Aerial gymnastics: Pickett does it all

Matisse Pickett
performs to
"Get Lost" from
"Moana" in
aerial
gymnastics.
(Photo by
Ed Piper)


By Ed Piper

Matisse Pickett, captain of the La Jolla wrestling team who starred at the school for four years, performed an intricate and beautiful set of maneuvers hanging from a cord attached to the ceiling at an aerial gymnastics showcase two days after her high school graduation.

Matisse, who qualified for CIF Masters in wrestling in February, took part in performances to "Get Lost" from the "Moana" movie, then "Maleficent" from "Sleeping Beauty" Sat., May 30, with fellow students for a private aerial gymnastics program. The routines took months of practice to master the flips, drops, and twirls--all the while suspended in mid-air in an impressive display of athleticism and strength.

The showcase for parents in Kearny Mesa included performances to music--including upside-down moves--using silk pieces that look somewhat like drapes hanging from the ceiling; hoops; and straps.

Sunday, June 1, 2025

LJ baseball banquet 5/31

Photos by Ed Piper

Seniors

SS Hank Hansen received
the Brent Woodall Award
at the year-end school
awards ceremony.

Vicki and Rick Eveleth applaud during awards
at the Viking baseball breakfast. The Eveleths
are both "Coaching Legends" from LJHS
in the Breitbard Hall of Fame.