Joel Walker
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Steve Virgen
In basketball, when shooters catch fire, they are thought to be in
the zone. Joel Walker, a Newport Harbor High senior, was able to find
that zone, but in soccer, scoring five goals in one game and seven in
one day.
Walker’s five goals, two on penalty kicks, led the Sailors to a
7-1 win over Burroughs of Ridgecrest in a ninth-place semifinal at
the Trabuco Hills tournament Saturday. He scored two more goals to
help give Newport a 4-0 win over Santa Ana Valley in the ninth-place
final later that day.
The Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week also scored two goals in a 3-1
pool-play win over Tesoro to open the tournament Friday. The Sailors
went 3-1 in the tourney and Walker scored nine goals in the
victories. He was in the zone indeed, especially against Burroughs.
“I was really in the zone in that game,” said Walker, a starting
forward for the Sailors. “I was putting every thing away in that
game. I had some luck with the PKs and it wasn’t all me. It was all
the [Newport] players helping me out. They were building it up and I
just happened to be the one putting them in.”
Walker was able to score because the teams in the tournament did
not know much about him. He took advantage and by the time the game
ended, he had two defenders marking him. Against Burroughs, he was
still able to get behind the defense in that situation.
On one occasion, he was fouled, but still found a way to score by
collecting the penalty kick. What’s more remarkable about Walker’s
five-goal performance is that he sat out five minutes in the first
half because he was assessed a yellow card and Newport Coach Ryan
Hernandez took him out with 15 minutes left in the game because the
Sailors had already secured victory.
However, shooters usually remember the one that got away, and
Walker was no different.
“I did have one shot that went off the cross bar,” Walker said.
“It would have been better than all of the goals I got, but it didn’t
go in.”
Walker credited his successful run in the Trabuco Hills tournament
to the hard work he put in during the off-season. He said he trained
with Jason Boyce, a former Corona del Mar standout who was a member
of the under-17 U.S. national team and also competed in Major League
Soccer.
Walker also aspires to play professionally and that was one of the
reasons he dedicated much of his time to soccer. Before that
opportunity comes, Walker said he wants to compete in college.
Overall, there was a greater, yet simple reason he has been
working tirelessly to perform better.
“I love soccer,” Walker said. “It’s my passion. No contest.
Nothing is a greater sport to me. Ever since I was a kid I’ve been
infatuated with the game. I watch four games a week on TV. I don’t
know what it is. It’s just mesmerizing.”
Walker also appreciates the game so much because six years ago it
was almost taken away from him. In fact, he almost lost his life. He
suffered third-degree burns when he slipped into a mud pit while
sightseeing near a volcano in Hawaii.
He was in Hawaii because he was in a soccer tournament with a
youth team that also included Warren Junowich and Brian Campos, who
are teammates on the Newport boys soccer squad.
Walker said onlookers formed a human chain to get him out of the
hot pit, but the damage was done. However, Walker rehabilitated and
continued his love for the game.
Walker’s passion for soccer was at an all-time high last week. But
he and Coach Hernandez are hopeful there is greater success in the
near future.
“With Joel, the goals are going to come, it’s just a matter of how
many he’s going to get,” Hernandez said. “You just can’t keep up with
him. He can step up in any situation, basically. That’s why he’s such
a key player. There’s no stopping what he can do. He’s just so
dangerous. You can’t touch him.”
Hernandez said Walker’s speed is what usually sets him apart from
other players. Walker did not attain that speed until he was 12. He
said that’s when he started to work out and build his speed. His
quickness and his skills helped him earn a spot on the Olympic
Development Program Southern California team for boys born in 1986.
He was recruited among 40 players and then made the cut of 18.
Yet for all the skills, Walker is more concerned with victories.
“I felt great after that game [against Burroughs],” Walkers said.
“And I feel good after those kind of games. But to me a win is a win.
I’m just always thankful that I’m healthy and able to contribute to
the team.”
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