Monday, March 30, 2026

LJ b golf: Stars shine

By Ed Piper

In their third Western League dual match Tues., March 24, this one against St. Augustine at Riverwalk, the Vikings' steel-nerve guys continued their cool, under-pressure play.

Eugenio Cardoso Martinez, the freshman who has led the way all season with a 5.46 differential, shot a 42 to co-lead Coach Christie Quinn's sextet with junior Quinn Daniels against the talented Saints.

It was Eugenio's sixth time in 12 outings either leading or co-leading his teammates in low score. That's quite a start to a high school golfer's prep career. Plus the former Queretaro, Mexico resident had never competed State-side in interscholastic play before this season.

Santiago Cardoso Martinez, his older brother, also shined with a 44, the same score as sophomore Kellen McGrath and senior Harry Park.

Sunday, March 29, 2026

LJ Spring sports: Cardoso Martinez and Martin star in two-sport performances

By Ed Piper

Santiago "Santi" Cardoso Martinez and Charlie Martin stand out in being listed on the rosters of two different sports during this Spring's CIF schedule.

Santi, a top golfer from Queretaro, Mexico, who began play for Coach Christie Quinn's team this Spring, is also listed on the Vikings' varsity lacrosse roster as a junior defender.

In different sports entirely, Martin, who busted his left hand and thumb in football last fall, batted lead-off for Gary Frank's varsity baseball team in a recent game. Then, Sat., March 28, he ran a leg in the boys 4x100-meter relay at the 45th Mt. Carmel Sundevil Track Invitational alongside fellow senior Leed Smool, Cristian Prince, and Peyton Gustafson.

Two years ago, Seigo Lavinsky and a teammate pulled off a similar dual performance, playing for the golf team and also being on the varsity lacrosse team.

LJ baseball: Vikes win 3 of 4

Lefty Charlie Smith, with his high leg kick,
is carrying a 2-1 record with a 2.42 ERA.
The sophomore leads the Vikings with
a very efficient 26 innings pitched so far.
Smith is shown here starting at San Dieguito
Academy March 11.
(Photo by Ed Piper)


By Ed Piper

As of this writing (March 29), the Vikings have won three of their last four games, producing runs in big bursts for the first time this season after a dry start: 17 runs in beating West Hills March 18, and eight more in an 8-1 clocking of Santana March 23, both in the GMC Tournament in away games.

The recent run has partially righted the Viking ship at 4-6. Hunter Durfee (five RBI's) and Oliver Obler (3) led the attack in the big win over the Wolfpack.  

In the Sultan swatting, the "Z" man, senior Zoran Shepanski, contributed three RBI while five other hitters drove in runs in a team-wide effort at the plate.

What has to give Head Coach Gary Frank some satisfaction is that after playing out one-third of the season (29 games scheduled through the regular season), and half of the pre-league slate, five different team members have bunches of four, five, or six RBI's for the season:

--Catcher Carter Strauss and sophomore Durfee have six apiece;
--Senior leaders Obler and "Z" stand at five each;
--and Harper Lane, the leading hitter by average last year as a junior, has four RBI's.

In addition, in a bright sign that things have turned offensively for La Jolla, four mostly-full-time batters are carrying averages of .300 or above: Obler tops out at .429, while third baseman Joseph Crudo is carrying a healthy .370 mark.

Charlie Martin, who ran in a four-man relay at the 45th Sundevil Invitational at Mt. Carmel High Sat., March 28, is hitting .320--sometimes in the leadoff spot--while Shepanski comes in at an even .300.

Strauss, the catcher, has by far the most plate appearances, as he hits regularly in the leadoff spot, with 42. He has walked 12 times to lead the team, the only player in double figures and the only one above seven bases-on-balls.

Saturday, March 28, 2026

LJ track @ 45th Sundevil Invitational - Mt. Carmel HS - 3/28

Photos by Ed Piper

"4 x 8" - 4 x 800m relay


4 x 100 relay: Charlie Martin (left foreground), Leed
Smool (back middle in gray sweatshirt), Cristian
Prince (black sweatshirt). Peyton Gustafson
was at the long jump pit.

Girls relay: Leilani Hill (near center).










































Friday, March 27, 2026

LJ b lax 2, Lakewood (Colo) 10 - halftime 3/27

Photos by Ed Piper

Sawyer Griffis (left) of the Vikings puts some
moves on defender Loudon Speaks (11)
of the Tigers near midfield in front
of the scorer's table.

LJ's Massimo Perez (29) moves the ball
around the circle behind the goal
in the first half. He is pursued by
Dru Ferrin (left) of Lakewood.

LJ goalie Noah Fasbinder (3, far left), a junior,
looks to clear the ball after a save. #10 is
teammate Jacobo Carrasco, and #2 behind
is junior Mark Shtrahman.

Offense meet with Head Coach Graham
Macnab during a timeout.

Defense meets in a separate huddle.












LJ VB: Jones began BCI a quarter century ago

By Ed Piper

While coaching and substitute-teaching at Point Loma over 25 years ago, Dave Jones was instrumental in starting the Beach Cities Invitational tournament, which has grown to be one of the largest high school volleyball tourneys in the region.

The long-time La Jolla High volleyball coach, who also teaches English in the classroom on campus, texts, "I subbed (19)97-99 and coached at LJ in (19)98, then got my teaching contract at Point Loma." Jones, amiable and looked to for direction by his fellow coaches in CIF San Diego Section, then coached for the Pointers from 1999-2001 before moving "back" to LJHS, this time with the teaching contract in Fall 2001.

Through all that time, Dave has seen plenty of change on the court and on campus. But of his "baby", the Beach Cities Invitational, it has grown and grown.

Jones is proud of this fact: "We (La Jolla High boys) are the only team that has won it twice in the 24 years" of the tournament (not convening during COVID in March 2020). The years were 2008 and 2017.

The current Vikings, led by senior setter Adam Grushkevich and Sonny Wiczynski--who are also partners in beach volleyball, which Jones also assists Jay Northrup in coaching--met a tough team in St. John Bosco Saturday morning, March 21, in bracket play on the second day of the tourney, and got smoked 3-0. But that's the way it is in the BCI, drawing top teams from within the area and outside the area.

The first afternoon of play, after school on Friday, the way the Invitational is set up, boys teams play in three-school pools. From that round-robin competition, squads move on to the second day of competition, Saturday, placed in brackets according to Friday's results.

La Jolla was set in a pool including Malibu and Queen Creek, a community south of Phoenix. Teams come from far and wide.

Jones: "I actually grew (the tourney) to 60 teams, but then started shrinking the field purposely, while maintaining the caliber of teams.

"Now my goal is to have 12 of the top local teams and 12 high-level teams from other sections and states."

Jones started the BCI in both girls and boys volleyball way back in the day at Point Loma, then moved them to La Jolla with his teaching move.

"The same name (for both genders) was too confusing when I stopped coaching girls about 15 years ago (when this reporter met Jones). So they still run a similar tournament, but it's not the same."

*  *  *

The Vikings have quite a star-studded volleyball program, with the girls headed by Kelly Drobeck, a respected and long-time coach, the boys under Jones' tutelage. The girls were lucky to get Drobeck a decade ago when then-Athletic Director Paula Conway (now AD at Bishop's) scooped Kelly up in the aftermath of her dismissal at Cathedral Catholic.

The two coaches represent quality coaching, but in two very distinct streams: Jones has always been vocal in advocating for student-athletes "playing on school teams with their friends". Drobeck represents the talented former athlete (she was an All-CIF performer at "Uni", USDHS, the precursor to Cathedral Catholic) who coaches full-time and serves as a walk-on coach in her specialty sport.

For the sake of clarity, I'll call the one model the "American scholastic" model, the other the "European" system, which is used in most of the rest of the world.

For example, this reporter lived and taught in Mexico City right out of college. I was exposed to a setup of athletic teams divorced from academic institutions, which has the advantage of focusing only on athletic development. The system also has the drawback of not directly encouraging young people to pursue their educations alongside their sports involvement. In a Two-Thirds World country like Mexico, that means that you have talented soccer players, for example, who often don't go past middle school for who don't finish the equivalent of high school.

Another example is the German wrestler who spent a year in America attending La Jolla High and competing for the Vikings' wrestling program. She and her parents were astounded that she could participate in sports linked to the academic institution was attending for her high school matriculation. When she earned her letterman's jacket by competing in enough dual meets and tournaments, she and her mother were overjoyed, sending photos of her in the jacket to family and friends back in Germany.

At present, the state of high school athletics would, kindly, look chaotic, with thousands of transfers between schools occurring at a much higher rate than even five years ago. Some students across the national scene have transferred to four different high schools in four years of competition, thereby compromising any outward intention of pursuing education for education's sake.

Unfortunately, the college situation has helped foster this environment, with the same chaos being passed down to the prep level. In addition, the NIL movement--Name, Image, Likeness--in which an amateur can keep his or her amateur status and still receive money from commercial deals endorsing products has gone way off the rails.

The worst example of a young person trying to deal with the sudden access to millions of dollars features Mikey Williams, a former San Ysidro basketball player, who put four bullets in a Tesla in a fit of jealous rage a handful of years ago outside his own million-dollar abode in Jamul. His lawyer negotiated a plea bargain that kept him out of custody and enabled him to play college ball, though not at Memphis State, where he had been recruited. At last report, he is playing out his eligibility at yet another college, Sonoma State.