Eberhard back on wing helps
Sea Kings fly
BASKETBALL:
Senior scores game-high 19 points, helping CdM beat
Los Alamitos in battle of defending CIF champs.
By Matt Szabo
The Sea Kings played at the tournament Monday. And Tuesday.
And Wednesday.
Finally, Schachter got some practice time on
Thursday, and he used it to put senior Joe Eberhard �
usually the trailer on offense � back on the wing.
Eberhard, in turn, showed Los Alamitos just how
dangerous he is from that spot on the floor. He poured in a game-high 19
points, including a trio of three-pointers, to lead CdM
to a 57-50 win over the Griffins in a ninth-place semifinal of the tournament
Friday at Troy High.
�We wanted to get Joe back scoring a lot,� Schachter
said. �He was having success on the wing over the summer. He probably averaged
about 30 points per game.�
The big game against Los Alamitos matched the defending CIF Southern Section
Division III-A champion Sea Kings against the Griffins, who as defending I-A
champions are Orange County�s only other defending CIF boys� basketball
champion.
But CdM (6-2), which will play in the ninth-place
game today at 1:30 p.m. at Sonora High, had plenty of stars besides Eberhard in the battle against Los Al (5-4).
Senior guard Erik Rask chipped in a season-high 12 points, senior forward Adam Brakeville had 10 and freshman guard Clayton Ragsdale hit
three fourth-quarter free throws and dished out six assists.
�This will probably be the turning point,� Rask said. �We�ve been coming out a
little flat lately, but we had a really hard practice [Thursday] and today it
showed. They�re a really good team, and we came out and took it to them.�
Oh, yeah, then there was senior center Stefan Kaluz.
The Brown University-bound standout, who came into the
game averaging 21.4 points per game, scored a season-low eight and made just
one field goal. It was the fewest points Kaluz, six
of eight from the line, has scored since his sophomore year.
But defensively was where last year�s Division III-A Player of the Year shined
Friday, collecting nine rebounds, blocking six shots and helping limit Griffins
junior Clark Evans to eight points.
�This was the best defensive game I�ve seen Stefan play in the last two years,�
Schachter said. �Normally he gets a lot more
rebounds, but it�s a lot tougher to rebound against a 6-10 guy than it is
against 6-3 guys. He did a great job defensively for us.�
The 6-10 guy � Los Alamitos senior center Corbin Moore � had a team-high 15
points, doing his best to rally his team in the fourth quarter after the Sea
Kings led nearly the whole game.
Brakeville then made two free throws with 22 seconds
left to push CdM�s lead back to 55-50. After Los Al
missed a layup, Kaluz corralled the rebound, then nailed two more free throws for the final margin of
victory.
�It was the most intense we�ve played,� Schachter
said. �I was very pleased with our energy, more than anything. Hopefully this
will propel us.�
And it was Kaluz, though not scoring much, who was
setting up shots for his teammates.
�Their goal was to take Stefan out of the game, they were doubling down on
him,� Eberhard said. �The guards, we just had to hit
our open shots, which we did. We had to step it up.�
North Orange County
Championships
Ninth-place semifinal
Corona del Mar 57, Los Alamitos 50
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Corona del Mar � Eberhard 19, E. Rask 12, Brakeville 10, Kaluz 8, Ragsdale
3, K. Rask 3, Gallian 2.
3-pt. goals � Eberhard 3.
Fouled out - None.
Technicals
- None.
Los Alamitos �
3-pt. goals � Chung 1.
Fouled out - None.
Technicals
- None.
MATT SZABO may be reached at (714) 966-4614 or by e-mail at
[email protected].
Reader Feedback
There are 1 comment(s) comments on this story:
CdM Fan wrote on Dec 15,
2007 6:57 AM:
" Mr. Szabo:
Very well written article. I was not at the game, but have a son on the team.
It reflects what occured (speaking with son), as well
as did a nice job of recognizing several players that contributed to the win.
It also captured the potential "over the hump" feeling the team has
had. They have not been playing to their potential, but the coaches are too
good, the ball players too skilled and unselfish not to improve each game as a
team. Well done. "
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