Jeritt Thayer
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Steve Virgen
In the fall, Jeritt Thayer will attend New York University, where he
plans to major in journalism and creative writing.
Before he left Corona del Mar High, Thayer got a head start, so to
speak. He wrote his own legacy. It has mostly to do with his
defensive prowess on the baseball diamond, but one cannot overlook
what he did with the bat, as well.
Thayer, the standout shortstop for the Corona del Mar baseball
team, went 4 for 4 with an RBI and a run scored to help lead the Sea
Kings to an emotional, come-from-behind, 6-5 victory over Northwood
in the CIF Southern Section Division IV semifinals June 1 on the
Timberwolves’ diamond.
He also went 2 for 2, with an RBI, and was hit by a pitch in the
Sea Kings’ 3-1 championship win over Tesoro at Dodger Stadium
Saturday. For all of his defensive notoriety, the CdM senior finished
with a .463 batting average, which was second on the team. He led the
squad with a .544 on-base percentage.
Thayer was consistent for the Sea Kings, who finished 25-5 and won
17 in a row to end the season. His play at shortstop was something to
marvel at, CdM Coach John Emme said. Thayer led the Sea Kings with 77
defensive assists.
“He’s the best defensive player I have ever been around,” said
Emme, who just finished his seventh year with the Sea Kings, who won
their second CIF title in five years. “He is unbelievable. I have no
doubt he has a future in this game, even beyond college. He has gifts
that you can’t teach.”
Thayer will try out for the soccer team at NYU next year. The
university only offers a club team for baseball and Thayer is still
deciding whether to compete. He loves both soccer and baseball.
In the winter, he earned second-team All-CIF Division II honors.
He helped lead the CdM boys soccer team to a Pacific Coast League
championship and an appearance in the CIF Division II semifinals.
Thayer competed in cross country in the fall.
At NYU, where his older sister, Jaclyn, plays soccer, he will most
likely concentrate on his major and play soccer, although baseball
will always be in his heart. He said, someday, he will write a novel.
Maybe he will write about his life and times at Corona del Mar, the
spring of 2004, when he and his close friends, many of them seniors,
won the CIF Division IV title.
Thayer’s baseball story took life when the senior acquired
confidence, which came from the acknowledgment this would be his
final baseball prep season.
“This year, I just became more confident,” he said. “I didn’t have
anyone or anything looming over me. I felt confident based on what
was around me.”
Thayer, the Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week, said his improvement
this season had mostly to do with the work he put in ever since he
played Little League baseball.
“I would just go out with my dad [Scott] all through my life and
take ground balls from him,” Thayer said. “Weekends, weekdays, taking
ground balls.”
When Thayer took the field at Dodger Stadium, he seemingly went
back to those times with his father, so as to calm him from the
pressure that comes with playing a CIF championship game on a Major
League baseball field.
“It was a whole new experience,” Thayer said of playing at Dodger
Stadium. “The field is in top condition. When you walk on Dodger
Stadium, the field is nicer than ours. And that’s hard to do, because
our field is really nice. Everything is perfect. The thought of being
able to play in front of that many people ... It was just an amazing
feeling.”
Thayer was hit by the pitch on his first at-bat in the second
inning. He said that helped ease his nerves. With the Sea Kings
leading, 2-1, in the fourth, Thayer provided CdM a cushion with an
RBI single.
He had two assists and no errors on defense. Playing well on
defense also helped his cause offensively.
“Both [hitting and playing defense] went together,” Thayer said.
“When I’m playing defense, I’m more focused on the game. If I didn’t
play defense, I would lack at hitting.”
When Thayer plays defense, he is very noticeable. In the game
against Northwood, he left his feet to snag a line drive to end the
first inning, when the Timberwovles had a runner on third.
“He’s got the best hands I have ever seen,” Emme said. “It’s
unbelievable what he does out there.”
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