Lacrosse training
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Mike Sciacca
Andrew Mahlmeister gave up a sport he was accustomed to, in order to
try something new.
Scott Harris has been involved in athletics much of his life, so
venturing into a new sport seemed only natural.
The two are certain they made the right choice.
They are among five seniors from Huntington Beach High who wanted
to establish a lacrosse club team in a city known primarily for
surfing and beach volleyball.
Not only did the five help set up the new team -- the ball got
rolling, so to speak, in December -- they will be known, Coach Ralph
Ornelas said, as the “founding fathers of this sport in Huntington
Beach.”
“I believe this motto has given them the desire to have this
program succeed,” said Ornelas, who is a lieutenant in the Los
Angeles Sheriff’s Department.
Mahlmeister, Harris, Chris Davidson, Morgan Fullmer and Troy Fleck
-- all seniors -- approached Ornelas, asking him if he would be
interested in coaching a lacrosse team.
“We started with nothing, and now, we have complete uniforms and
best of all, the spirit to make this program a success,” said
Ornelas, adding that Davidson instigated the organization of the
boys’ team and then asked him to coach the team.
There are two lacrosse club teams in Huntington Beach, one
consisting of 22 boys, the other of 13 girls -- all of high school
age -- and both teams are known as the Oilers.
Of the 22 players on the boys’ roster, 21 attend Huntington Beach
High and the other attends Servite.
One player is Hannes Rieger, an exchange student from Germany.
Serving as assistant coaches are Pat Clynes and David Sheek.
Clynes played lacrosse in high school, and later at Notre Dame.
Sheekplayed at Chapman University and currently plays for the Orange
County Lacrosse Club.
Ornelas played high school lacrosse, which was then called the
“fastest game on two feet,” he said.
All three coaches donate their time to the team, which is not
associated with the high school.
Patty Williams holds the title of team mom and record keeper.
In lacrosse, there are 10 players on each team: a goalie, three on
attack, three midfielders and three defensemen.
The game requires coordination and agility, quickness and speed,
and is action-packed. Precision passes and dodges are routine.
Lacrosse is played with a stick, the crosse, which must be
mastered by the player in order to throw, catch and scoop the ball.
The sport has spanned centuries and is considered the oldest
continually played sport in North America.
Lacrosse has been predominantly played on the East Coast but,
Ornelas noted, it is becoming “extremely popular” in the San Diego
and Los Angeles county areas.
The Orange County Lacrosse League, he said, continues to grow.
“I believe the young men and women from Huntington Beach can
develop into outstanding lacrosse players,” Ornelas said. “Pat, David
and I would like to see, 10 years from now, that Huntington Beach has
the best players in Southern California.”
Mahlmeister, 18, a first-team member of the All-Sunset League
football team last fall, has done the shot put and discus during the
past three track and field seasons.
He said he tired of track and field and wanted to give lacrosse a
try.
“I had heard of it and had seen it played on TV, and I thought
it’d be fun to play,” said Mahlmeister, who is a defenseman. “I
basically gave up track to give lacrosse a try, and I’m very happy I
did.
“Now, with a few games under our belts, I have a real feeling for
just how much potential this sport has here in Huntington. I think
I’d like to possibly coach in the sport, someday.”
Harris, the Associated Student Body president at Huntington Beach
High, previously played soccer and volleyball at the school.
He is a midfielder on the boys’ lacrosse team.
“I’ve always enjoyed studying new sports and really wanted to give
lacrosse a try,” Harris said. “I’ve discovered that lacrosse really
is a combination of every other sport I’ve played.”
Both players acknowledged that lacrosse is a sport that requires
plenty of sprinting and technique.
“I’d really like to see this sport take off in Huntington,”
Mahlmeister said. “But it takes dedication, and it begins by getting
the younger kids to come out for the team. Then, they will be able to
find out just how fun this game is. That’s how a program gets
established.”
The Oilers have played two games thus far in their 12-game season,
which runs through May.
“We may be 0-2, but we’re having a great time out there,”
Mahlmeister said. “We’re learning to play the game as we go along.”
Ornelas said that while the Huntington Beach lacrosse club teams
continue to learn about the sport, he and the coaching staff are
working to instill traits in their players that are important in any
sport.
“As coaches, we want to give these kids the values of good
sportsmanship and leadership,” he said. “I hold myself and coaching
staff to be role models for these youngsters.
“I was proud to accept this challenge to coach. I love the sport
of lacrosse and believe that the Huntington Beach community will
embrace the sport.”
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