Sports - Los Angeles Times
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MILESTONE When you’ve been a baseball coach as long as Harry Jenkins has, you learn to take the good with the bad. Jenkins approaches his 400th career victory with the same outlook. “It
makes me feel good,” he said, “and a little old.” In his 23rd season, Jenkins can get victory No. 400 when his West Torrance High team plays Carson at 4 p.m. Saturday in the quarterfinals of
the Redondo tournament. Reaching the milestone in a game at Redondo would be appropriate. Jenkins enjoyed his greatest success at Redondo, both as an athlete and a coach. He was a standout
basketball and baseball player at the school, then coached the Sea Hawk baseball team to a 339-179-4 record from 1970-88. After taking two years off, he returned to coaching at West in 1990
and has guided the Warriors to a 60-31-1 record in four seasons. West is off to a 5-2 start this season and boasts a talented lineup that includes five starters batting .400 or higher, and a
fast-improving pitching staff. The only blemishes on the Warriors’ record are one-run losses to Simi Valley and Cerritos. “It’s a real good group, a younger group,” Jenkins said. “The
pitching staff was a question mark, but they’ve been doing an excellent job.” West has gotten a big boost from Kirk Bolling, a junior right-hander who is 3-0 with a 1.94 earned-run average.
In his last game on March 15, Bolling had 11 strikeouts and no walks in a complete-game victory over Leuzinger, 6-2. An all-around athlete--he was West’s quarterback in football--Bolling
plays third base when not pitching. ADD WEST It’s no surprise that Jenkins says hitting is the Warriors’ strength. The team returns perhaps the area’s finest offensive player in senior
infielder Derek Nicholson, The Times’ 1993 South Bay Player of the Year when he batted .520 and led the area with 37 runs batted in. Nicholson picked up where he left off in West’s opener
March 4, hitting a home run in his first at-bat in an 8-6 victory over Pasadena Muir. It came three days after he had a cast removed from his right hand for a hairline fracture suffered in
practice. Nicholson bats left-handed. After a fast start, Nicholson has one hit in his last six at-bats, bringing his average down to .500 (11 for 22). He has two home runs and seven RBIs.
Others batting .400 or higher for West are senior designated hitter Joe Intermill (.529), who has eight consecutive hits in the past three games; Bolling (.480), who leads the team with
three home runs and 12 RBIs; freshman catcher Tony Cosentino (.412), who has filled in for an injured starter; and junior center fielder Jim Yates (.400), a South Bay all-star last season.
“When we hit, we can play with anybody,” Jenkins said. THE YARDSTICK Reaching 400 victories is no small feat, but Jenkins still has a long way to go to catch El Segundo Coach John Stevenson.
The dean of South Bay coaches is virtually out of sight with a 35-year record of 737-264, the winningest mark in state history. Stevenson and Jenkins will renew their rivalry when El
Segundo and West meet in Pioneer League games April 27 and 29. And there’s a possibility the teams could meet before that in the Redondo tournament. WOUNDED EAGLES Injury and illness have
reduced El Segundo’s baseball team to a skeleton crew, a handicap that didn’t stop the Eagles (6-2) from beating Culver City, 8-4, Monday in the first round of the Redondo tournament. Still,
Stevenson said it was difficult to make out a proper lineup. “We’re down to barely being able to field a lineup without hitting our pitchers,” Stevenson said. “Every position player was in
(Monday’s) lineup.” Ryan McCloskey, El Segundo’s standout second baseman, is out indefinitely with a torn knee ligament, and several other players have been sick. Fortunately for the Eagles,
the pitching staff has remained healthy. The team has five capable pitchers in senior left-hander David Reed (2-1), a returning All-Southern Section pick; junior left-hander Derek Fowler
(2-0), and senior right-handers Dan Croxall (1-1), Phil Costello (1-0) and Bill Brown. It’s rare for a high school team to have that much pitching depth, but Stevenson doesn’t know how much
it will help. “If we played (more games) it would really mean something, but we don’t have the innings for five pitchers,” Stevenson said. “I don’t know how much better it is to have five
pitchers than three. We’re trying to split the innings as much as possible.” El Segundo’s pitching depth could pay off when it plays four games in the San Luis Obispo tournament during
Easter break. LONG BALL Since becoming eligible midway through last season, Redondo third baseman Steve Rawson has averaged a home run every two games. The 6-foot-3, 240-pound senior hit his
fourth home run of the season Saturday in a 6-2 victory over North Torrance in a Redondo tournament opener as the Sea Hawks improved to 6-3. He also homered Friday in a 9-8 victory over
Beverly Hills in an Ocean League opener. Entering Wednesday’s game against Morningside, Rawson had nine home runs and 29 RBIs in 19 games since coming off academic probation in 1993. Just as
impressive as Rawson’s two-run homer Saturday that reached the lights in right field was his bases-empty triple that bounced off the wall in center field, 390 feet away. “I couldn’t drive a
golf ball 390 feet,” Redondo Coach Tim Ammentorp said. “We call that part of the field the boneyard because everything hit out there dies. “I thought (Rawson’s hit) was going out, but some
of the players didn’t think it would make it. We had enough time to discuss it because the ball was hit so high.” WILD BUNCH Loyola Marymount batters set an NCAA Division I record for most
hit by pitches in a game with seven Friday in an 8-6 West Coast Conference victory over host San Francisco. Five San Francisco pitchers contributed to the record, mostly on curveballs that
failed to find the plate. Loyola’s Greg Bergeron and Mike Peters were each hit twice. Remarkably, no fights broke out. The Lions apparently understood that the Dons’ wildness was
unintentional. Loyola (12-15, 4-5 in the WCC) will play the first of four home games this week at 2:30 p.m. today against Hawaii-Hilo. The Lions open a three-game WCC series against San
Diego with a 2:30 p.m. game Friday, followed by a doubleheader Saturday starting at 11 a.m. Freshman shortstop Marc Mirizzi, who was named WCC player of the week last week, leads Loyola with
a .364 batting average. TENNIS RECORD Julie Oshiro of Loyola Marymount has set the school record for career singles victories. The senior from Gardena High is 76-43 over four seasons,
eclipsing the previous mark of 73 victories set by Kris Anderson in 1986-89. Oshiro, who is 20-5 this season, posted an impressive 6-1, 6-1 victory last week over Pepperdine’s Isabella
Petrov, the 46th-ranked player in the nation. Seventh-ranked Pepperdine won the match, 6-3. Oshiro set the Loyola record for single-season victories with a 28-9 record as a freshman.
BASKETBALL HONORS Senior guard Jason Pickett of Banning High was named City Section 3-A Division player of the year after leading the Pilots to their second consecutive division title.
Pickett averaged 26 points a game. Other area players named to the 3-A team were forwards Lamarr House of Gardena and John Terry of Narbonne, and Banning guard Eric Jett. Carson forward
Charles Perry was named to the 4-A squad. BRIGHT FUTURES Larry Seibel is excited about a group of third- and fourth-grade girls he coached in a Redondo Beach youth basketball league this
season. He was so confident in his players’ abilities, he entered them in a boys’ tournament last weekend. Seibel’s all-star team went 0-3, but he said the girls were competitive and not
intimidated. He wants to start a club team with the same group of players in hopes of developing their skills for high school. “Sometimes girls at that age get totally ignored,” Seibel said.
“My mission is to keep coaching them. By next season, we should be able to play in any boys’ tournament.” Standouts on Seibel’s team included high-scorers Erin Eubanks and Iris Dulay and
leading rebounder Jennifer Mardis. THIS AND THAT * Many of the area’s top senior basketball players will be featured in the South Bay Athletic Club’s fourth annual all-star boys’ classic and
inaugural girls’ classic Friday at South Torrance High. The doubleheader begins at 5 p.m. with a girls’ three-point shooting contest and concludes with the boys’ game at 7:30. Tickets will
be sold at the door. * The Manhattan Beach Parks and Recreation Department is offering spring slo-pitch softball leagues for men and women. The entry fee is $415 a team, including a $50
refundable forfeit fee. Information: (310) 545-5621, Ext. 321. * Sign-ups have begun for the Gardena/Carson YMCA indoor soccer league, eligible to boys and girls between the age of 5 and 17.
Games begin April 30. Information: (310) 327-0750. MORE TO READ
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