Title dreams emerged from ashes of defeat
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Barry Faulkner
Saturday’s CIF Southern Section Division III boys volleyball final
lasted 81 minutes, but top-seeded Estancia High’s 25-15, 25-20,
20-25, 26-24 victory over Orange Lutheran was at least three years in
the making.
The Eagles, whose program had struggled since it lost CIF title
matches in 1979, ‘80, ’83 and ‘84, began to excite then second-year
coach Tracey Ingraham in 2002, when a corps of young, talented, but
raw players endured a 4-13 season (0-10 in the Pacific Coast League).
Forced into the varsity spotlight almost by necessity -- there
were not enough players to field a junior varsity squad --
then-sophomores Josh Kornegay, Kris Hartwell and Brad Larsen, as well
as freshman Trevor Holmes, showed Ingraham signs of cohesion amid the
string of defeats.
“When I saw how well they played together as a team, even though
they weren’t quite a refined as volleyball players yet, I knew there
was something special there,” said Ingraham, an all-league girls
volleyball performer at Estancia in the 1990s. “I knew the guys had
chemistry on the court.”
Kornegay, who played varsity as a freshman, saw it too and began
fueling his passion for the sport with off-season participation in a
club program in Huntington Beach.
Holmes, already a veteran of two seasons with the Balboa Bay Club
program upon arriving at Estancia, joined Kornegay in encouraging
others to hone their talent by playing for club teams.
Larsen followed suit, and later Scott Sankey, a 6-foot-6 senior
who was recruited from the basketball program before his junior year,
enhanced his abilities in club volleyball.
“I really believe Josh and Trevor started it all,” Ingraham said
of the club bug that overtook the roster.
“Getting guys to play club propelled our team,” Kornegay said.
A higher skill level, the experience of having played together in
2002, as well as a shift out of the volleyball-rich Pacific Coast
League (where Corona del Mar, Northwood and Laguna Beach have
achieved consistent success) accelerated Estancia’s rise.
The Eagles were 29-11 last season, earned a share of the school’s
first league title since 1984 and reached the CIF Division III
semifinals.
Last season’s success provided a valuable steppingstone and the
Eagles were ready to fly after another off-season with their
respective club programs.
“It would have been nice to go all the way last year, but we
didn’t expect it,” said Hartwell, who believes Holmes’ arrival at
setter was the key piece to the puzzle.
“I think [winning CIF] was in the back of our minds, even two
years ago,” Holmes said. “We knew it was something we could get to
and we knew it was something we needed to get to.”
After Saturday’s win, Sankey said he getting there was entirely
worth the hard work that paved the way.
“I’ve never played in anything like that before,” he said.
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