Breakers’ gym dandy
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Mike Sciacca
In every sense of the word, Laguna High’s boys’ and girls’ basketball
teams finally will get to be dubbed the home team in the upcoming
week.
Sure, the Breakers have worn their home jerseys the past few weeks
during holiday tournament action, but beginning Tuesday, they truly
will be wearing their home colors.
That’s because Dugger Gymnasium, which has been under renovations
the past six-plus months, is scheduled to finally open its doors for
action on Tuesday.
That’s when Laguna will host Newport Harbor in nonleague girls’
basketball action.
Three days later, Laguna’s boys will entertain rival Corona del
Mar on Jan. 9, in their first game at Dugger.
“It will probably seem like a foreign court to us, even though
we’ll be playing at home,” said Laguna boys’ coach, Mark Hill who, in
addition to this being his squad’s first home game of the season,
will be coaching his first-ever game in Dugger.
The 2003-04 season is the first at the school for Hill, who
previously coached at Esperanza.
“Typically, a team is supposed to have a little bit of an
advantage playing at home,” he said. “We’ll see if that factors into
things against Corona del Mar.”
Among the renovations at Dugger Gym included replacement of
“antiquated” electrical equipment, new lighting, electrified
bleachers, a new floor, work on the locker rooms and “other minor
renovations,” Hill said.
For the first part of the season, the Laguna varsity teams have
been displaced. Yet, they have found comfort in a
“home-away-from-home,” in Thurston Middle School.
The varsity teams have used the new gymnasium at the “school up
the street” for practices since official basketball practices began
in mid-November.
The lower level teams, Hill said, have practiced at the small
North gym on Laguna’s campus.
All preseason games have been played on the road, which, Hill
said, has been a “huge detriment.”
The mark of the new year, however, marks a new start for the
basketball program.
“Not having Dugger to practice or play in, really hasn’t been that
big of a deal for us,” Laguna girls’ coach Stacy Howard said. “I
think that since the summer, we all knew that the gym time was going
to be scarce and that all of our preseason games were going to be on
the road. So, nothing that has happened this fall has been a surprise
to anyone.
“I think that our girls have taken it all in stride, just like
they have everything else in the past six months. They aren’t rattled
about late buses or bad refereeing or locked gyms or no air in the
basketballs. They just play. They laugh things off and find a way to
get ready come game time.”
Howard praised the efforts that Thurston Middle School put forth
in offering their gym to the Laguna teams.
“They have been incredibly accommodating,” Howard said. “Our kids
really feel at home at Thurston. Almost all of our kids went to
middle school there and they are comfortable practicing up on that
campus.
“It is home to them in a lot of ways and I don’t think that we
have felt overly displaced not being on campus at Laguna Beach High.
We are still in Laguna and still at a place that is very familiar to
our kids.”
Still, the players are looking forward to a home game -- and
seeing the new digs at Dugger.
“I’m pretty excited,” said senior Deana Awadalla, a starter on the
girls’ varsity squad. “It’s going to seem a bit strange, though,
playing at home. I think our team has learned a lot from playing on
the road. It doesn’t matter where you play, you just need to play
tough and stay focused.”
Awadalla and the Breakers will get another chance to stay “tough”
and “focused” tonight when they play -- on the road -- a nonleague
game against Sunny Hills.
Laguna’s boys’ team was scheduled to host Edison in a nonleague
game Saturday at Dugger, but the gym was not ready and the game was
switched to an Edison home game.
Following the Edison game, the Breaker boys will have four days to
practice and become accustomed to new-look Dugger, all in preparation
for their key, Jan. 9 Pacific Coast League opener against rival
Corona del Mar.
“Having four days to practice at home before that game will be
really nice,” Hill said. “It’ll be great to finally play at home.”
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