The Pipeline
Thursday, September 25, 2025
LJ b water polo 15, Bishop's 14 - OT - Western League opener 9/24
La Jolla goalie George Gayner (1, far right)
blocks a Bishop's shot with 2:12 left in the
third quarter, the score tied 6-6.
(Photo by Ed Piper)
By Ed Piper
In the Western League opener, La Jolla downed crosstown rival Bishop's, 15-14, in overtime in a thrilling matchup of equals. A packed house at Coggan Pool helped make the impact of every play, every call crucial as both student bodies were well-represented.
The Vikings climbed back from a 12-8 deficit with 1:16 left in the third quarter to tie the game with 57 seconds left in regulation on junior Henry Glenister's shot on a pass from teammate Ryder Jaseniuk.
6'6" Dexter Black scored two goals in the first three-minute overtime, Lev Kevorkian added another, and La Jolla held on through the second OT to secure the victory.
Black, catching his breath after the two squads slapped hands pool-side following the match, deflected credit to his team: "We were distributing the ball. We got it to our centers. Henry made that great shot to put us in OT. It was all just shooting from there."
Dexter had scratches on his body and flexed his back with a grimace after getting out of the pool following the two overtimes.
Wednesday, September 24, 2025
LJ b water polo: Bishop's looms in league opener 9/24
By Ed Piper
The local water polo universe circles near to Coggan Pool in La Jolla this afternoon, Sept. 24, when Bishop's travels to the La Jolla High campus to open Western League play against the Vikings.
Each school carries in a positive win-loss record, Coach Tom Atwell's Vikings at 15-2, the Knights under Doug Peabody and Ian Davidson at 6-5 in their own pre-league competition.
Bishop's played in the South Coast Tournament at the end of last week, which saw Newport Harbor defeat Cathedral Catholic, 12-7, in the final.
The Dons are the reigning Western League champs, downing both La Jolla and Bishop's last fall in a rearranging of the local order in boys water polo.
Cathedral travels to Point Loma tomorrow, Thurs., Sept. 25, got its own league opener.
* * *
On Monday, Sept. 22, Peabody and Davidson were reluctant to make their athletes available for interviews. "We have a big game coming up," Davidson told a reporter who came by the Bishop's campus in person, not impolitely.
Then he said, "It's up to them." He thought: "They have three periods off."
A phone number was left, but no calls were received from the "team leaders" who were requested for interviews.
In the elite South Coast Tournament in Orange County, the Knights beat San Marcos (Santa Barbara), 12-7, then Mira Costa, 15-11, on Thurs., Sept. 18.
The next day, they fell to the eventual tourney champ, Newport Harbor, 15-8. Finally, on Sat., Sept. 20, Bishop's succumbed to Miramonte by one goal, 15-14.
LJ b beach VB: Danish former tour player assists with Clairemont
Morty Fog wears his
Danish pro tour jersey
to the LJ-Clairemont
match Tues., Sept. 23.
(Photo by Ed Piper)
By Ed Piper
Morten "Morty" Fog was wearing his bright red "Danish BeachVolley Tour" jersey--offset by his blue trunks--at the La Jolla-Clairemont beach volleyball match at the back of the Chieftains' campus Tues., Sept. 23.
It was the lead-in to a conversation about the jersey, and additionally, Morty's experience on the Danish pro tour, which peaked in his being named the top middle player in 2015.
The conversation then lent itself to a lengthy discussion over just what a pro player is. "Does it mean I played at the top level? That I received money for playing?" Fog asked rhetorically.
His last name, Fog, was even memorable. A reporter said, "Like the fog rolls in?" "Yeah," the 6'4" former beach player said.
"I played for 20 years at the highest level," he said during the extended "what is a pro" debate. "I made pocket money" during his best years at the highest level.
The issue really comes up because, as the reporter and interviewee agreed, outside of North America, the rest of the world subscribes to a non-scholastic view of sports and clubs that compete in those sports.
For example, this reporter lived in Mexico City right after college to teach English and language arts in a small private school. It is there that he encountered this "non-scholastic" system, which he later learned predominates around the world.
Teams there in basketball, in his area of preference, aren't tied to any high school or college. In fact, pro soccer teams that are named "UNAM" (Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico) or "UAG" (Universidad Autonoma de Guadalajara) have nothing to do with those universities except the name, and athletes who populate their rosters are not students in those schools.
"We have an NCAA in Denmark," said Morty, bringing the discussion back to Scandinavia. "But it oversees teams that are unaligned with schools." In other words, that version of the NCAA isn't really "Collegiate", it would be a board that oversees the sports world in Denmark.
Fog is now 38 years old. He last played on the Danish Beach Volleyball Tour three years ago. He also played in Switzerland and, of all places--he laughed--Bangladesh.
The tour in Denmark has 10 to 12 teams. Four of them come from Copenhagen, the capital.
LJ b beach VB @ Clairemont 9/23
Photos by Ed Piper
Andrew Cardenas lunges for a ball
in the threes match.
Chase Ostrom bumps in the ones match.
Dylan Marshall goes to a knee
to receive a pass, next to
Andrew Cardenas.
Andrew Cardenas (L) goes against
a 6'7" opponent from Clairemont
at the net.
Jeffrey Bruner vaults for the ball
in the fours pairing.
Hudson Matheny leaps for
a jump serve. The fours
won their first game
in overtime, 24-22.
Jeffrey Bruner does
likewise in the
match with the
Chieftains.
Monday, September 22, 2025
LJ b water polo: Looking ahead to Western League
George Gayner (rear top left) guards the cage
while teammate Henry Glenister (black cap)
defends Jorge Solis (4) in the Saturday afternoon
game Sept. 20 against Damien in the AFC
Tournament.
(Photo by Ed Piper)
By Ed Piper
The Vikings have to feel very good about winning the AFC title, a worthy accomplishment in a long-running tournament.
One drawback, though, was that the America's Finest City water polo tourney in Coronado could not provide La Jolla any worthy competition.
On day one, Friday, Sept. 19, in group (pool) play (which the Vikings enjoyed in their home pool, Coggan), Le Jardin Academy fell to the able Vikings, 13-2. Not much of a fight.
Two hours later, Valhalla--whom La Jolla had beaten badly only the week before--succumbed, 21-8. No fight at all.
So, when Saturday, Sept. 20, came around, and there wasn't a lot of buzz around the finals at the tournament, Viking coach Tom Atwell had to be somewhat concerned. His boys are playing well, but who were they going to be tested by?
The afternoon game against Damien wasn't going to provide it, with a 15-4 result. The evening match, in which Canyon Crest student coach Jake Peeler told me, "Don't underestimate us," was no better at 21-8.
The count after one quarter in that game was 7-2, 16-2 after two quarters.
The same thing happened last year: La Jolla won the AFC tourney, then proceeded to tread in hard times during the Western League schedule.
Meanwhile, from up north, the news was that Cathedral Catholic--who took over supremacy of the Western League last year--lost to Newport Harbor, 12-7, in the championship game of the South Coast Tournament.
Bishop's, the other main competition for the Vikings in the Western League and their opponent this Wednesday, Sept. 24, in the league opener, was also vying in the South Coast Tournament.
That tourney would seem to afford a better test of the skills of Nate Thomson, superior defender on the 4-5 side, Dexter Black, great scorer whether from the "5" spot or in the middle, Henry Glenister, 1-2 defender, and the rest in the black-and-red caps.
Maybe Atwell will have to rethink this one in the future. The legacy of former coach Randall Burgess at Coronado High is one thing, but the future of his LJHS program is another.
Sunday, September 21, 2025
LJ b water polo 15, Damien 3 - AFC 2nd day 9/20
Photos by Ed Piper
Jonathon Jimenez (R) wins opening spring
against the Vikings' Henry Glenister (13).
Dexter Black (left, 4), an All-CIF pick
last year as a sophomore, puts a hand up
against Jimenez (10).
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