The Pipeline
Wednesday, May 20, 2026
LJ baseball: The prize - 8 hours of driving
LJ baseball: Avenging a 17-0 loss
LJ baseball 8, Vista 4 - D3 play-in round - 5/19
By Ed Piper
Monday, May 18, 2026
LJ softball: Open D5 playoffs Wed., 5/20
By Ed Piper
La Jolla's softball team (8-0 in the Central League, 13-11 overall) opens the Division 5 playoffs Wed., May 20 at home, riding a 10-game winning streak.
Starting pitcher Jacey Taylor, in the pitching circle because Coach Anthony Sarain doesn't have anyone else--except shortstop Ella Pearl, who usually takes over for Taylor in later innings as another member of the team playing out of position--will have another chance to break La Jolla's school record for home runs in a career.
Jacey (playing for the Vikings 2023-2026) hit three home runs Thurs., May 14, in LJHS's final regular season game against High Tech. That puts her at 27 for her quadrennium at the coastal school, tying Emmy Cardenas (2020-2023).
Taylor, with her third home run in a shortened five-inning game, broke Emmy's single-season record, 12 home runs, with her 13th shot of the season.
After her first home run on the day, a line drive to center-right, which this reporter witnessed, she came back to the Vikings' dugout and declared, "I didn't think it was going to be a home run."
"We go as far as our pitching takes us," was Sarain's basic statement as his team increased their league-winning advantage over Kearny (4-4), Hoover (4-4), High Tech (3-5), and Crawford (1-7).
Sarain's 2016 team won the CIF Division 4 title, and finished as runner-up the next year, 2015.
La Jolla's last league title was 2021, when Cardenas was a sophomore. "They just walked her the next year," said her dad, Rich, of the 2022 season, when the Vikings' cupboard was more bare of talent at multiple positions.
This team has anchors at catcher (junior Aviv Laska), third base (freshman Ellie Thomson), shortstop (Pearl, a sophomore), and centerfield (senior Savannah Putnam). Putnam was named to the all-league team last year.
Taylor and Pearl appear to be in consideration for league Player of the Year, determined by the coaches, usually the pennant-winner. They could be named co-Players of the Year, or one solo. It would be unthinkable that Jacey would not be named to at least share that honor. She is the only player in the Viking dugout with more than one home run, and her RBI total (66) more than doubles the next closest player (Aviv, with 31).
Pearl has 12 doubles, Taylor 15.
La Jolla's opponent Wednesday is Orange Glen, who is seeded eighth. (The Vikes are seeded first.) LJHS has home field advantage throughout the playoffs, since they go in with the top seed.
Southwest (SD) is seeded second and is playing in the lower bracket, to spread the favored teams across the brackets. To show you how fast the team quality falls off, no respect meant for the other squads, Hoover is seeded fourth. La Jolla demolished the Cardinals in league, 24-12 and 26-6.
LJ baseball: Vikings' comments before Senior Game 5/13
LJ softball: Jacey hitting homers 'was great'
By Ed Piper
Emmy Cardenas attended La Jolla's baseball game Friday, May 15, at Lincoln to decide the league title.
Cardenas, the LJHS solo record-holder for home runs in a season and in a career until last week (May 14), was asked about first baseman Jacey Taylor's three home runs in Thursday's game against High Tech High. The trio of blasts broke Emmy's single-season record of 12, setting it to 13. Taylor tied Cardenas' career record at 27 homers.
Smiling, she said, "It was great. I was asking her before the third one, 'Have you ever hit three home runs in a game?' She said, 'No.' I haven't either--I hit two in a game.
"Then she it it (the third homer)."
The first shot was a line drive over the fence in center-right. "I didn't think it was going to go out," said Jacey to her teammates when she got back to the dugout.
After a reporter left, her other two home runs went to center-left, one into the planter with palm trees beyond centerfield.
LJ baseball: 'Just another day at the office'
By Ed Piper
The stage was set, and La Jolla coach Gary Frank was standing outside the slim dugout on the Lincoln High School field Friday afternoon, May 15. He was asked what the team's mindset was, going into the title decider:
"To come out and play a good game, play to the best of our ability, and we should be fine.
"Just another day at the office."
Obviously, the long-time head coach was trying to project calm and to set a tone for his players. They had lost two straight to the Hornets in the three-game series to end the City League schedule, and they needed to change whatever they were doing.
The dugout, before Frank's response to a reporter's query, was eerily quiet. Hopefully, it communicated grit and resolve, but you didn't know if the silence was going to lead to an activated state on the field--after a pair of disappointments earlier in the week, 3-1 and 6-2.
Frank was asked, "Who is a key player or key players in the game today?"
"Every one on the roster. We're going to need 16 deep to win this game today." The Vikings did, by a breath, 7-6.
* * *
Senior Andrew Cardenas was slated to start on the mound for La Jolla. Pitching coach Koa Scott described Cardenas' pitch mix:
"Four-seam cutter, two-seam cutter, curveball, and changeup."
How does he have to use his repertoire to be effective?
"Low in the zone, try to get (outs)."
* * *
Frank, before that, said what his senior righthander needed to do:
--"Command the zone."
--"Pitch to poor contact."
--"Let our defense do their work."

