YEAR ONE ON THE JOB — Sports

30 12 2011

I took an afternoon yesterday to write up some highlights after almost an entire year in the co-pilot’s seat at the Daily Journal Sports desk. Technically, I turn 1 on January 5, but considering that 2011 is almost in the rear view mirror, it seemed like a good time to take a look back. Here’s how it came out. Enjoy.

Three-hundred-fifty-seven days ago, I moved a box of belongings some 40 feet over to a vacant desk in the San Mateo Daily Journal office. It was then that sports editor Nathan Mollat threw me the keys to the Peninsula Sportsmobile and basically said, “don’t crash it, my friend.”
And boy, what a ride it’s been. It isn’t that the San Mateo County sports scene was a foreign thing to me before — I spent time corresponding for a couple different newspapers in the past. But year one of my full-time reporter experience has been chock-full of great moments — how time flies when you’re having fun.

Team of the Year — The nominees here are plenty — from the Menlo-Atherton girls’ volleyball team, the South City wrestling team, the Menlo boys’ tennis team, the Terra Nova girls’ basketball team. The nod here goes to the Serra football team. I considered myself very fortunate to cover the majority of their football games, including their CCS winning game against Menlo-Atherton. They’re a great collection of athletes and young men who made history and most of the time, looked silky smooth and damn-near unstoppable. Plus, because of the Padres, I made my television debut during halftime of their away win against St. Francis (shoutout to CSN. I hope your ratings didn’t take that big of a hit).

Awesome Interview of the Year — Talking to so many people daily, you can see how one can get hundreds of interviews all mixed up. My nod here goes to a couple that stood out in my mind because of the candid nature that produced some great quotes. First, my favorite postgame interview with a coach was a talk with M-A soccer coach Jacob Pickard following a loss to Burlingame on the away turn of their 2010 season. Pickard didn’t mince words, visibly upset at his players’ performance. On the player-side, El Camino’s Trevor Kelly turned what was supposed to be a 15-minute Athlete of the Year chat into 50 minutes of sound-bite gold. It’s a shame I didn’t get to use them all. I left the El Camino campus knowing why so many coaches raved about this young man.

Student Section of the Year — The majority of the student sections in the county are good, but very few are great. Quick shoutouts go to Sacred Heart Prep’s Sixth Man, as well as M-A’s. Burlingame, you get some love too for perhaps the most consistent support. Menlo as well. But far and away my favorite are the boys from Serra High School. More often than not, the Padre student section is on-point with their chants and fill football fields and basketball gyms with great energy. I was on the sideline for an away game against St. Ignatius. Outnumbered 4-to-1, Serra’s pack of fans did the same thing its players did on the field to the Wildcats (that, “SWEEATTERRSS” chant is a classic). Check the score to see what I mean.

Snack Shack of the Year — Admittedly, I don’t frequent snack shacks like I used to. I was a regular connoisseur back in the day. With that said, my nod here goes to the fine people at the South City snack shack. On a cold, rainy day in November, the hot chocolate and rice bowl hit the spot. Honorable mention goes to the chefs at Woodside High — the Wildcats take the Burger of the Year award. While not a high school, the best thing I ate while on assignment was a tri-tip sandwich at the Belmont Sports Complex during the District 52 tournament. I heard they have their shack catered though, so I’m checking with the judges to see if that’s allowed.

Best Rivalry — There are those rivalries I knew were good coming in, but over the course of the season, a pair stood out as the most heated — and they’re both on the soccer pitch. On the girls’ side, San Mateo and Aragon clashed twice in Bay Division play. In game one at San Mateo, Katelyn Turtletaub came off the bench playing on a bum leg and her play produced the game-winning Dayna Sakuta goal. Aragon wasn’t happy, and a couple of weeks later, battled the Bearcats and outworked them for a 3-1 revenge win. There were plenty of hard fouls, trash-talking and extracurricular activities. What sold it for me was, after the 3-1 game, I asked Aragon midfielder Kat McAuliffe how much of the win was payback for that 1-0 loss. She said, “oh, it was all payback.”

We stay chilling in Intensity City for a bit and look back at the Burlingame/Menlo-Atherton rivalry in boys’ soccer. In Game 1, the Panthers were simply outplayed and outhustled in a 2-1 loss to the Bears, prompting Burlingame Mike Sharabi to say, “The next time we see these guys at our place I think it’s going to be a different result.” Turns out, he’s not just a coach, but a prophet as well. In Game 2, the Panthers looked like a completely different team, winning 2-1. Once again, plenty of hard fouls, yellow cards and most importantly, quality soccer.

Individual Performance of the Year — This is a tough one, the list of nominees here is long and they’re all dominating — Michael Latu against Hillsdale with 233 yards rushing in the second half including three very long, very awesome touchdowns; Charlotte Pratt and her 16-goal scoring clinic against Willow Glen in a 20-19 double-overtime win (perhaps the Game of the Year); Jordan Richwood’s 10-strikeout, two-hit masterpiece against Aragon (or any Richwood game for that matter); Thomas Cox of Serra against Burlingame (11 Ks in a 3-1 win).

But the winner here is Serra’s Erich Wilson and his six-touchdown dismantling of Wilcox in the Padres’ season opener. Wilson touched the ball 12 times in that game — half of those he found himself in the end zone. He could have easily scored seven or eight if he hadn’t basically sat out the entire second half. Truth is, pick any of Wilson’s games in 2011 (244 yards, 4 TDs versus St. Ignatius, 228 3 TDs versus Milpitas) — the man was a machine.

Wilson is also responsible for the Play of the Year. In the CCS title game against M-A, No. 21 intercepted a pass at the 36-yard line in the fourth quarter. Upon picking the ball off, Wilson ran a clear 53 yards across the field, juking three Bears along the way, Then, turning a dime, the man bolted down the M-A sideline and glided beautifully and violently down the Bears’ sideline for the nail in the coffin. It was his second insanely-ridiculous run of the game in which he ran clear across the field, found a crease and was gone — the run prompted @CheckkThissOutt (Nathan Mollat to the rest of you) to tweet “wow, that was impressive.” Understatement City, boss.

Female Athlete of the Year — Our publication gave San Mateo Karyn Jacobs the honor at the end of the school year, and deservedly so. Jacobs is supremely gifted and fearless as an athlete. She’s one of a few superb three-sport athletes still left in the county — they truly are rare considering how many athletes are so sport-specific nowadays. But there were others girls who left great impressions in Year 1. There was no one faster with a ball on her feet than Woodside’s Taylor Duffner; no one gutsier (and crazier) than San Mateo’s Turtletaub; Richwood was the definition of dominating; Terra Nova’s Terilyn Moe is a stud; Who has bigger hops than Aragon’s Chanel Joyce? Maybe M-A’s Seini Moimoi; Lauren Croshaw, also a Don, is a running machine.

Male Athlete of the Year — I’m going to sound like a broken record, but Serra’s Wilson was just that good. But I’d be remise not to mention Kelly from El Camino, Freddy Avis and Jake Bruml of Menlo baseball, Aaron Orr of M-A, Rodrigo Puliceno of Burlingame, Brian Ha of El Camino, Nick Hale of Menlo and Josh Lauese of Sequoia as some of my favorites.





Aragon gets their revenge —

9 02 2011

I got an email yesterday morning from my GIA in my Creative Writing class at SFSU. To make a long email short she announced that my Tuesday evening class was canceled because my professor has the flu. Night off! Whew! Yay!

But instead of taking the afternoon off, I decided that I wanted to work. Yeah, that’s me, Mr. Workaholic. To be honest, I’m glad I did because the soccer game between San Mateo and Aragon was well worth it. The first time the two teams met, it was a classic, story book finish. This time around, Aragon wanted to make sure Julio didn’t write another one of those kind of stories. Great game, ladies. Pictures below belong to the Daily Journal and my boss, Nathan Mollat.

Dons closing the gap
By Julio Lara, Daily Journal Staff

Three weeks ago, when the San Mateo girls’ soccer team recorded an emotional 1-0 win over Aragon, the rematch became a must-see event.

Told you so.

Aragon and San Mateo waged another battle on the soccer field Tuesday afternoon and this time the Dons played like a team possessed, scoring three beautiful goals to avenge their January loss 3-1.

“I feel pretty happy,” said Aragon midfielder Kat McAuliffe. “We came into the game, wanting to win. We were just really pumped. We were kind of embarrassed by what happened last time so we wanted to come at home and show them they can’t mess with us.”

Aragon has played like a completely different team since the last time they saw San Mateo — since that time, the Dons haven’t loss, going 7-0, jumping two slots in the Peninsula Athletic League Bay division standings. With their win Tuesday, they are only two points behind the Bearcats with three game to play.

“That (game) got stuck in our craw — going over to their place and losing in the last 10 minutes,” said Aragon head coach Will Colglazier. “The captains just organized us at the end of that game and they said ‘This is unacceptable.’”

Whatever was said in that pow-wow has really been taken to heart by the entire Aragon team. And that focus showed in the round two against San Mateo.

The Dons seized the momentum early by going right at one of the best defenses in the county. Five minutes in, Kimi Petsche was fed a spectacular through ball and just beat the offside trap. With the entire back line closing in on her, the junior skillfully finished past a charging Karyn Jacobs for the early 1-0 lead.

“We wanted it so bad,” said Aragon goalkeeper Ashley Lentz. “The before-game talk was, ‘We need to get it back. We should have won the first game.’ It was all positive.”

With all the energy on Aragon’s side, the Bearcats showed some moxie in scoring the equalizer. A great hustle play by Tarryn O’Mahoney in the Aragon defensive zone started it off. After O’Mahoney intercepted a pass, she found Kelly Ghiorso on the right wing, who immediately lobbed a pass into the Aragon penalty box. After a bounce, the deadliest striker in the league, Katelyn Turtletaub controlled the ball, cut to the inside and with her left foot beat Lentz for the equalizer with 16 minutes left in the half.

“We have a great defense,” Lentz said, “(And) our plan was to stop her. We put people on her, and we stopped her (but it was) easier said than done.”

Read the rest of the story here.





San Mateo’s Big Win —

4 02 2011

A couple of weeks ago when I posted this story, I got an email from a Mr. Coyle. He told me he loved the story (cool), BUT that I had misspelled his daughter’s last name, Danielle COYLE, who happened to be one of the stars of the game defensively. I DID WHAT!?! Ay! I hate when I do that. I work pretty hard to not screw up names, but sometimes it’s inevitable with all the copy we produce at the Daily Journal. Anyway, I covered San Mateo’s latest win, a 1-0 victory over Woodside, and I got a chance to apologize to Danielle, or DOYLE, as she’s been called the last couple of weeks … all because of me. Danielle is a hell of a soccer player and a hell of a sport. One last time though, for chuckles …

Little laugh, for myself. OK. Another part of Mr. Coyle’s email said something to the degree of, “hey, how about focusing a little more on this San Mateo defense? They’ve been playing really good etc. etc.” Well, it turns out Mr. Coyle was right — San Mateo, with Danielle Coyle leading the charge, turned in another great performance. Here’s an excerpt from the story filed last night. The picture is actually of DOYLE (laughs) taken by Nathan Mollat, my boss.

Bounce goes Bearcats’ way
By Julio Lara, Daily Journal Staff

Thursday’s girls soccer matchup between the top two teams in the Peninsula Athletic League’s Bay Division brought with it the potential for some offensive fireworks as both teams feature a deadly striker.

But San Mateo’s latest win, a 1-0 victory, was brought to you by the letter D — as in defense.

The Bearcats (8-1-1) took advantage of a fortunate bounce, an own goal in the 20th minute, and held Woodside’s Taylor Duffner in check throughout the contest to come away with the huge win over the visiting Wildcats (6-3-1).

“Obviously, we would have liked to pass the ball around a little more and control the game,” said San Mateo head coach Daire O’Connor. “But it just a direct game from both sides. Our defense held up really well and then, they just did the work. They conditioned well, we kind of got numbers behind them a little, just to frustrate Woodside and we were kind of looking for that counterattack goal. It was a good, evenly fought contest. The work rate from the entire team was really impressive.”

Impressive indeed. While San Mateo’s Katelyn Turtletaub has (deservedly) captured the majority of the headlines this season for the front-running Bearcats, it’s been the rock-solid defensive play of the back line that has been the true star.

The fearsome foursome proved on Thursday that there might not be a better group in all of San Mateo County.

“The thing is, we just work so well together,” said defender Danielle Coyle, who anchored another superb effort for the Bearcats back line. “We’ve been playing together pretty much since freshman year, we just gel.”

Coyle is the heart of the San Mateo defense, but she’s not alone — Jennifer Ticzon was excellent from the sweeper position and flanking them on Thursday were Kim Lu and Stephanie Lee. O’Connor also highlighted the play of his goalkeeper, Karyn Jacobs.

Read the rest of the story here.

Lots of post coming this weekend — stay tuned.





Athlete of the Week — Katelyn Turtletaub

11 01 2011

Awesome last name, even awesome-mer (haha!) player. This week’s Daily Journal Athlete of the Week is Katelyn Turtletaub of San Mateo high school. I got to meet her yesterday and chat for a bit. When I saw her play against Hillsdale, she was noticeably limping and actually we spoke the first time as she tried to give her ailing ankle a break … I’m sure Hillsdale was very thankful for that since she had already torched them for a pair of goals.

This is her last year against Half Moon Bay. This year, she’s been killing it on the soccer pitch, scoring goals almost at will. Here’s an excerpt from the story that ran in today’s Daily Journal written by yours truly. Turtletaub is a great young lady and I wish her much success the rest of the season.

Banged up Turtletaub tearing it up
By Julio Lara • Daily Journal Staff

When asked to name one thing she enjoys more than scoring goals on the soccer field, San Mateo scoring machine Katelyn Turtletaub flashed a golden smile. After thinking it over for a bit, stumped, the senior replied, “I don’t know. I can’t think of anything.”
The difficulty with what seems like a simple question is understandable when you score as often as Turtletaub has in the 2010-2011 season — through seven games the San Mateo senior has scored 11 times. And for a pure striker like Turtletaub, there is no greater joy than lighting up the scoreboard.
“I just like how the ball looks when it hits the back of the net,” she said.
Last week during the opening of the 2011 PAL Bay division season, Turtletaub was up to her usual self. In the opener against Hillsdale, the forward exploded for three goals and an assist in a 6-0 drubbing of the Knights.
The senior was unstoppable in that game — scoring on a run straight down the middle of the Hillsdale defense for goal number one, on a penalty kick for the second and on the end of a great cross from Shannon Wischer for the trifecta. She would’ve had a fourth too, but her nifty volley was mysteriously disallowed on a call that she said the referees couldn’t exactly explain.
With a hat trick under her belt, Turtletaub capped off the week by scoring the second goal in a 3-0 victory over Menlo-Atherton to push the Bearcats to a 2-0 start in the young season.
For her efforts Turtletaub is the Daily Journal Athlete of the Week.
Turtletaub has been on this torrid goal-scoring pace without the aid of healthy legs. The hobbling around the soccer pitch is  noticeable, and at times, Turtletaub has no choice but to take herself out of the game to give her ailing limbs a break.
“I have bad knees in general,” Turtletaub said, referring to a laundry list of injuries that have nagged her throughout her playing career. She went into this season handicapped by an ankle she injured while playing volleyball in the fall. She tweaked her shoulder in the game against Menlo-Atherton.

You can read the rest of the story at www.smdailyjournal.com under SPORTS.