SJ Issue 49, July 19, 2012

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RIO LINDA JRS. PUT CLAMPS ON DISTRICT 6 JULY 19, 2012 VOL. 3. ISSUE 49 FREE SAC JOAQUIN RECORDS ARE MEANT TO BE RECORDED. Pg. 8 U-S-A! LIGHTS, CAMERA ... CONCORD? CLUB SCENE BLOWOUT O’DOWD’S CHIDOM READY FOR HER WORLD DEBUT HEAT WAVE SAC GOLFERS ON A HOT STREAK HOLLYWOOD COMES TO EAST BAY AND SSM PLAYS PRODUCER EXPANDED COVERAGE OF SUMMER’S BEST TEAMS BEST IN PREP SPORTS PG. 26

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Sac Joaquin Issue 49

Transcript of SJ Issue 49, July 19, 2012

Page 1: SJ Issue 49, July 19, 2012

rio linda jrs. put clamps

on district 6

july 19, 2012vol. 3. issue 49

FReesac joaquin

records are meant to be recorded. Pg. 8

u-s-a!

lights, camera ... concord?

club scenebloWout

O’DOwD’s chiDOm reaDy fOr her

wOrlD Debut

heat Wavesac gOlfers Ona hOt streak

hOllywOOD cOmes tO east bay anD ssmplays prODucer

expanDeD cOverage Of summer’s best teams

best in pRep spoRts

pg. 26

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PHONE 925.566.8500 FAX 925.566.8507EditOriAl [email protected] Chace Bryson. Ext. 104 • [email protected] Bill Kolb, Erik Stordahl, Mitch Stephens, Doug Gardner, Matt Smith, Clay Kallam, Jim McCue, Eric Gilmore, Dave Kiefer, Liz Elliott, Tim Rudd, Jonathan OkanesPhotography Butch Noble, Bob Larson, Jonathan Hawthorne, James K. Leash, Norbert von der Groeben, Phillip Walton, Doug Guler

CrEAtivE dEPArtmENt [email protected] manager Mike DeCicco. Ext. 103 • [email protected]

PublisHEr/PrEsidENtMike Calamusa. Ext. 106 • [email protected]

AdvErtisiNg & CAlENdAr/ClAssiFiEd [email protected], (925) 566-8500Account Executives Erik Stordahl • Erik@SportStars Online.com, Phillip Walton • [email protected] sac Joaqin edition: Ron Davis • [email protected] • (916) 564-0111, Dave Rosales • [email protected]

rEAdEr rEsOurCEs/AdmiNistrAtiONAd Traffic, Subscription, Calendar & Classified Listings [email protected] • Deb Hollinger. Ext. 101 •

distributiON/dElivEry [email protected] manager Butch Noble. Ext. 107 • [email protected]

iNFOrmAtiON tECHNOlOgy John Bonilla

CFO Sharon Calamusa • [email protected] Manager/Credit Services Deb Hollinger. Ext. 101 • [email protected]

bOArd OF AdvisOrsDennis Erokan, CEO, Placemaking GroupRoland Roos, CPA, Roland Roos & CoSusan Bonilla, State AssemblyDrew Lawler, Managing Director, AJ Lawler PartnersBrad Briegleb, Attorney At Law

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This Vol. #3, July 2012 Whole No. 49 is published by Caliente! Communications, LLC, 5356 Clayton Rd, Ste. 222, Concord, CA 94521. SportStars™© 2010 by Caliente! Communications, LLC. All rights reserved. Subscription rates: 24 issues, U.S. 3rd class $42 (allow 3 weeks for delivery). 1st class $55. To receive sample issues, please send $3 to cover postage. Back issues are $4 each. Repro-duction in whole or in part without permission of Publisher is strictly prohibited. The staff and management, including Board of Directors, of SportStars™© does not advocate or encourage the use of any product or service advertised herein for illegal purposes. Editorial contributions, photos and letters to the editor are welcome and should be addressed to the Editor. All material should be typed, double-spaced on disk or email and will be handled with reasonable care. For materials return, please enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. SportStars™© and STARS!™© Clinics are registered trademarks of Caliente! Communications, LLC.

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First Pitch ............................................. 8

Locker Room .................................... 10

Behind the Clipboard ...................... 11

AAA SportStars of the Week ........ 12

Club Scene ......................................... 14

Impulse ............................................... 24

Health Watch ................................... 25

TriSteps ............................................... 30

Training Time ..................................... 32

Camps + Clinics ............................... 33

get hip to it: Your hamstrings and hip flexors won’t take care of them-selves. You gotta work at it. Pg. 25

run it down: If you want to improve your conditioning, look at the total program for best results. Pg. 32

Our Hollywood sources (you’re darn right we have those) tell us they’re taking De La Salle’s story to the big screen. Our Bill Kolb has some tips to make sure they get it right. Pg. 10

Golfers such as Kit Carson, above, are making the River City known as a place where the new generation of talent is emerging. Pg. 16

ON tHE COvErJosh Beebe of Rio Linda Junior All-Stars.

Photo by James K. Leash.

rio linda junior all-stars have theirsights set on the world series

26James K. Leash

Book it,Bill-O

Putting Sacto On the Map

James K. Leash

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It was only a little more than a month ago that a quiet afternoon at Sport-Stars Headquarters turned into lively

discussion zone when it was discovered through an online report that ESPN would be shutting down nearly all of its high school sports operations.

The report stated that both of the com-pany’s high school sports magazines and its ESPN HS website would be disappear-ing by early September. On the surface, that appeared great for SportStars — one less competitor for us to battle. However, the ESPN HS group had a number of peripheries under its umbrella, including a handful of entities which have become synonymous with California high school athletics.

As someone who participated in high school sports in California, and began writing about them the moment I stopped playing, it’s hard for me to fathom what either would be like without the work of Cal-Hi Sports. Nelson Tennis founded Cal-Hi Sports in 1979, with hopes of creating a definitive list of the state’s high-school sporting records and his nephew Mark Tennis has followed in his footsteps. The organization, which later evolved into Student Sports and most recently CalHiSports.com under ESPN HS, has not only become the ultimate source for state records but also established itself as the definitive voice in state rankings and All-State team selections of several sports.

The work and research done by the CalHiSports staff is so well respected that the California Interscholastic Federation section commissioners have Mark Tennis make a presentation of CalHiSports.com’s CIF State Football Bowl rankings prior to closing their doors and selecting the participating teams.

My first thought upon hearing the news of the ESPN announcement was, ‘This can’t mean the end for CalHiSports.’ It also occurred to me that for more than a handful of our readers, especially some of the most devout high school sports fans, others could’ve heard the news and put two and two together as well.

Well, fear not. I went straight to the source.

I’ve known Mark Tennis for close to 10 years now and have always had a great deal of respect for his work. As one of the state’s true historians of high school athletics, he undoubtedly receives a high volume of calls and requests. I know that I’ve gone to him as a source on several occasions and he’s always taken the time — even though he does his own reporting and feature-writing and could clearly horde such things from writers and publications that he could easily view as competitors.

Two weeks following the ESPN an-nouncement, he sounded like the same old Mark. Eager to talk about all things prep sports, and seeming adamant about one thing: Cal-Hi Sports would go on, in some capacity.

“(The announcement) wasn’t totally surprising,” Tennis said. “I kept telling the family that there was a shoe that was going to drop eventually. I just had that feeling. We’ve had deals before that have fallen out, so it’s not uncharted waters for us. ... It’s a very difficult market to get into. You have to really love it, which I still do.

“It’s still pretty new. We really don’t know yet where we go from here. It’ll still exist in some form or capacity. We’re not going to quit.”

And, of course, part of the reason Tennis hadn’t really given a great deal of thought to the future yet was he and his staff were still hard at work shoring up the All-State baseball and softball teams, naming the schools of the year, and their final awards, the State Male and Female Athletes of the Year.

Tennis is also in the process of updat-ing portions of the “CalHiSports.com State Record Book and Almanac”. The last print version was the Seventh Edition in 2009. There isn’t a new print edition planned any time soon, but they hope to get several updated lists online. A few football lists have gone up already and can be viewed at the CalHiSports.com website. Where those updates move to when the ESPN servers shut down sometime in September, is also something Tennis will be looking into.

“We’re not in panic mode yet (about anything),” Tennis said. “We’re not in any real hurry to get it all figured out. I’ve had a few organizations put feelers out to us, but I could also see myself just doing something very minimal. Maybe a blog and a Facebook page and take some time off. I’ve never really done something like that.”

That comment was followed by a slight pause.

“It wouldn’t be for the entire school year, I don’t think. Maybe just for the fall though, or something.”

Tennis does have a son who will be a junior on the Lincoln-Stockton cross country team this fall. And getting to watch his competitions more often may be an enticing thought as well.

But the diehard fans out there who look forward to seeing the state football rankings every Wednesday can breathe a little easier. Because even we can admit that it just wouldn’t feel right without them. ✪

July 19, 2012

Chace Bryson Editor

First Pitch

Chace@ SportStarsOnline.com

(925) 566-8503

More than 30 years of records, rankings Cal-Hi Sports still kicking

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ways tO turn the De la salle fOOtball mOvie intO a blOckbuster.You might have heard that Hollywood has finally gotten wise to what’s been going on in Contra Costa

County. Concord, more specifically (Winton Ave, if you wanna get super-picky). That’s right. The De La Salle High School football team is set to make its big-screen debut when Neil Hayes’ splendid book, “When the Game Stands Tall,” gets the full-on “Coach Carter” treatment from director Thomas Carter and Mandalay Entertainment. Rumor has it, production starts in September. We’re here to nudge these ignorant movie people in the right direction.■ 1. Coach lad — Probably the single most important decision regarding this picture is the casting of Bob Ladouceur. If we’re going small-market indie pic, we take Henry Czerny because, well, duh. Sure sure, he’s “that guy,” but he’s also that guy who’s a deadringer for the best high school football coach in the history of ever. Big market? Jeremy Irons. We’re pretty sure he can pull off the American accent. Plus he has the eye-ball and brow intensity we need in this role. And the ladies love him. Can’t hurt you at the box office. Sidenote: It wouldn’t kill ‘em to get Tom Sizemore to play defensive coordinator Terry Eidson. The beard needs to be just so. We’re just sayin’.■ 2. Facts — They matter, people. The press release on this thing had the Spartans’ winning streak at 138 games. Whosaywhathehecknow? One. Five. One. 151 straight W’s. Don’t short Lad and the gang anything. ■ 3. Football — Very simple. Get. It. Right. The Spartans aren’t the biggest or the fastest or the most athletic. They don’t run a fancy, high-flying offense. They run, like, three plays. They just run them very, very well. Everyone is exactly where he’s supposed to be. Make sure we stay away from any Statue of Liberty/flea-flicker nonsense. This ain’t Boise State.■ 4. Special effects — All that being said about the football? Sure, sure. But the big climactic scene where the invading alien forces drop the hammer on the zombie hordes? Let’s make sure that pops. ■ 5. the romantic twist — You know, that thing Hollywood does where it inserts a love angle to appeal more broadly? Where the scrappy defensive back who nobody ever thought would make varsity finds his soul-mate in a cheerleader from neighbor-ing Ygnacio Valley? Where he makes the streak-saving play in extra slo-mo and then they ride off into the sunset on a white horse? There isn’t one. Just. No.

— Bill Kolb

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I play linebacker and I came off the bench last year, but there’s an open spot. Right now, though, the coaches love this other guy who’s a great weightlifter. I’m a better football player, though, but I’m afraid I won’t get a chance because the other guy has better muscles. Isn’t football about making plays, not pump-ing iron?

 — O.T., Pleasanton

There’s a lot to unpack here, but let’s start with this:Coaches want to win. If they don’t win, especially in football, they

don’t get to coach very long. So if you give the team a better chance to win than the workout warrior, you’re going to wind up playing.

I know what you’re thinking. “My coaches aren’t smart enough to see the difference. They like him bet-ter and they’ll play him instead of me even though I’ll make more plays.”

It could be true that your coaches are idiots, but you know, I’m guessing they’re smarter than you think. It’s not like they just walked into the AD’s of-fice and got handed the job — high school football coaches pay their dues, and they’re not dumb. (That’s not to say they don’t make mistakes, but you have to remember that they do know more than you do. In fact, they know a lot more …)

Assuming, though, that the coaching staff can see that you’re better, they will play you. Which leads to the question of why they seem to favor the guy who can bench 325 (or whatever).

I’m guessing that the weightlifting king puts in a lot of time, and you have to realize that counts for a lot with coaches. Offseason is the time that indi-viduals improve, and the more players who are all-in during the offseason, the better the team will be. If someone comes to conditioning and busts their butt every second, the coaches are going to make sure everyone sees that they really, really appreciate that kind of effort.

They will also give those extra-hard workers every chance to succeed once the games begin. But again, the bottom line is winning, and putting the players on the field who give the team the best chance to win is the best strategy. So when the pads go on, if you can show the coaches you’ll make more plays, then it’s very likely you’ll get more playing time.

One other thing, though: Don’t go marching into the coaches’ office and claim you’re better than the other guy. It doesn’t hurt to talk to the coaches, but the conversation should almost always go like this:

“Coach, I really want to help the team win this fall, and I want to know what I can do to get on the field and help us win a league title.”

The coach will usually respond with some generalities and a couple of specifics. Your reply should be something like:

“Thanks, coach, I really appreciate the feedback. I’m going to work on those things and try to get better. Please let me know how I’m doing.”

And then you walk away.You never mention the other player. You never talk about playing time.

You never disagree. And you listen intently to whatever the coach has to say.That doesn’t mean you think the coach is right, necessarily, but since he

has the power, he makes the rules — and I’m pretty sure that whatever he tells you to work on, you need to work on. And I’m also pretty sure that if you get better at those things, you’ll find the coaches like you as much as the guy who has the biggest biceps on the team. ✪

Clay Kallam is an assistant athletic director and girls varsity basketball coach at Bentley High in Lafayette. To submit a question for Behind the Clipboard, email Coach Kallam at [email protected].

Clay Kallam

Behind the Clipboard

If you make plays, coaches will get you on the field

count’EM

props

Number of passing yards in the 2011 season by Folsom’s Tanner Trosin, which now officially tops the updated state records list released by CalHiSports.com

on July 16. CalHiSports will be releasing more updated lists throughout the summer.

5,185

kristian ipsenThe former De La Salle-Concord diver punched his ticket to the London Games when he qualified for

the Men’s Synchronized Diving event. The 19-year old nearly qualified for the Men’s Individual Springboard event; he placed third, just 1.25 points behind teammate Troy Dumais for the second of two spots.

“Whenever he was at a meet, everyone dove better. He inspired you to dive better. … No one wanted to beat him. We just wanted the experience to dive near someone who was that good.”

— 2012 NCS diving champion Asher lichtig (Acalanes) on competing against Ipsen in past NCS events.

chelsea chenaultIn an event where only the Top 6 advance, the Carondelet-Con-

cord senior placed eighth in the Women’s 200M freestyle – 0.21 seconds away from making history! Heck, a sneeze takes longer than that. But the fact that she’s only 17 means we can probably count her in for the 2016 Games.

“She doesn’t like to lose. … I think it’s going to really inspire her to take everything up a notch so she doesn’t miss the next one. … Instead of getting sixth, she’ll be fighting for a Top 2 spot.”

— Catherine breed, former Amador Valley standout swimmer and current Cal Bear.

maggie steffensYou might remember her as our cover athlete for the Oct. 28,

2010 issue. The former Monte Vista-Danville star owned her water polo opponents in high school and nothing’s really changed at Stanford. She’ll accompany her sister, Jessica, on the US Women’s team as they look to capture gold in a few weeks.

“I feared her. We would put two, three players on her and she’d still score. … She just has an incredible feel for the game. She sees the game and understands the game, and anticipates the game better than any player I’ve ever seen.”

— Former San Ramon Valley water polo coach Jon leach, who coached against Steffens when she was a freshman and followed her career.

Welcome to Props, where we shell out dap to athletes who delivered jumbo accomplishments throughout the past weeks. And what better way to dish it out than to have it come from their arch rivals? This issue has an Olympics feel to it.

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honorablemention

alexis cooper

The Sheldon-Sacramento grad and Arizona State-

bound pitcher was named to the Cal-Hi Sports’ All-State Softball first team. As a senior, Cooper led the Huskies to a 2nd straight SJS Div. I title with a 19-7 record and 34 RBI at the plate.

trevor bryant

The soon-to-be senior at Nevada Union-Grass Valley

led the NCVC 17-1 boys team to a 9-2 mark in the Open Division at the USA Junior Nationals in Dallas, Texas.

michaela leonard

placer-auburn . volleyball . 2012 grad

The former Hillgals’ setter earned All-Tournament honors in the National Division at the USA Junior National Cham-pionships in Columbus, Ohio. She and teammate Lianna Sybeldon (Ponderosa-Shingle Springs) received all-tourney honors as they helped lead the Northern California Volleyball Club (NCVC) 18-1 Moxie team to a 10-1 record and take the bronze medal. Michaela, who is already training with her new teammates at San Jose State University, finished her final high school season with 260 assists, 120 kills, 90 digs, and 41 aces as Placer (22-9 overall) advanced to the semifinals of the Sac Joaquin Section Divi-sion III semifinals.

sportstars magazine: Was medaling at the Junior Nation-als a satisfying finish to your club career?

Michaela Leonard: We aspired to play in the Open Division, but made sure that we really went after it in the National. We left it all on the floor and I’m glad that’s the way the season ended. Knowing that high school and club play is over, I think we went out with a bang.

ssm: What was the highlight of the trip to Columbus?

ml: Other than medaling, we enjoyed the Midwest weather. On our second night, there was

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a tornado warning and the trees were blowing all around and lots of thunder and lightning. We all went outside to take pictures of the weather because it was so different than what we have seen.

ssm: What factors influenced your decision to go to San Jose State for your education and volleyball?

ml: The location was a huge draw for me. It’s far from home, but close enough to go home to see my family and friends if I want to. When I visited schools, I got the best feel (at San Jose State) and I love my new teammates already.

nick madrigal

The Elk Grove freshman was named to Max-Preps.com’s

Freshman All-American team. Madrigal hit .379 with 34 runs and 18 RBI while stealing 18 bases during the team’s run to the SJS Div. I North semifinals.

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The girls of the Xceleration 18 Blue club volleyball team are no strangers to the U.S. Junior Nationals. Led by a core group that has been together for more than a few years, Xceleration punched its ticket to the American Division of the Junior Nationals in Columbus, Ohio, and went there deter-mined to make their final trip memorable.

They succeeded. Led by stellar performances from a variety of recent East

Bay graduates, the 18 Blues reached the quarterfinals and just missed making the medal round after a heart-wrenching three-set loss. They would settle for 5th place out of 32 teams and flew home with their heads held high.

“They were unbelievable,” coach Andy schroeder said. “It was a group that just took care of business when they walked between the lines. ... They (left) feeling good about them-selves. Everybody on the team put every ounce they had into that team.”

Erin sherwood, who just closed out her career at San Ramon Valley-Danville, was the team’s All-Tournament selec-tion at the outside hitter position. However, Schroeder said the other 10 players played equally integral roles throughout the nine-game tournament. The rest of the roster included outgoing seniors sarah vaccaro (Miramonte-Orinda), Jade santos (Moreau Catholic-Hayward), Emiko moran (Berkeley), Audrey breitwieser (Miramonte), Arianna Cruz (Moreau Catholic), lacey maas (Bishop O’Dowd-Oakland),

Julia Moradian (College Prep-Oakland), Jessica Vestal (Berean Christian-Walnut Creek) and the team’s lone senior-to-be, Annie shurtz (Campolindo-Moraga).

City bEACH: It just so happens that the team to win the 18U American Division was City Beach Black 18s from City Beach Volleyball Club of Santa Clara. Lead by standouts from two-time defending champion Palo Alto High, maddie Kuppe and Melanie Wade, among others, the Black 18’s went 11-0 to top the medal stand.

Other City Beach teams to perform well included the 13 Black (5th place, American Division), 14 Black (15th, Open Division) and 16 Black (19th, Open Division).

NOrtHErN CAliFOrNiA vOllEybAll Club: The Sac Joaquin Section was well represented at the Junior Nationals with the Northern California Volleyball Club (NCVC) sending six girls teams to Columbus, Ohio, and three boys teams to Dallas, Texas. NCVC’s 17-1 Boys posted the club and Northern California’s top finish with a 13th-place effort in the Open Division. Led by Nevada Union’s bobby Curtis and trevor bryant and Vista del Lago’s Griff Galvin, the team won nine of its 11 matches, falling only to the third- and fourth-place finishers in the division.

The Girls’ 17-1 and Boys’ 16-1 teams also competed in the Open Division, finishing 18th and 23rd against the nation’s best club teams. The NCVC Girls’ 18-1 Moxie team was the lone NCVC team to medal, earning a bronze medal after

NorCal volleyball teams shine at Nationals

Jonathan HawthorneRecent San Ramon Valley graduate Erin Sherwood earned All-Tournament honors with Xceleration 18

Blue at the USA Volleyball Junior Nationals.

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15SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™

aposting a 10-1 mark in the National Division. Washington-bound outside hitter Lianna Sybeldon (Ponderosa-Shingle Springs) powered the Moxie offense to third place.

NCVC’s other Junior Nationals finishes were as follows: Girls 17-2 Blue (30th, National), Girls16-1 Black (5th, Ameri-can), Girls 15-1 Black (5th, American), Girls 14-1 Black (23rd, National) and the Boys 15-1 Black (8th Place, Club Division)

sOftballOnce the Antioch Little League Senior All-Stars softball

team realized they had a chance to play host in the Division 2 Division Tournament, it made sure it was going to District 4 champions.

In the first game of the District 4 final, Antioch needed just five innings to dispatch of East County 14-4. Kiera drawhorn went 3-for-3 with three runs, Erica Johnson went 2-2 with three RBI and two runs scored, Rachel Martin was 2-for-4, with two RBI and two stolen bases and Juliann Lawrence pitched the team to victory.

The second game of the championship never happened, as East County was unable to get a full squad to the field the following night. Antioch hosts the Division Tournament which concludes with the championship on July 21, with an “if nec-essary” game slated for July 22. The winner advances to the

Western Regional tournament in Missoula, Mont.

7-On-7 fOOtballTwelve members of the Freedom High varsity football team

earned a paid trip to Indianapolis over the weekend of July 12-14 after earning the opportunity to represent the Oakland Raiders in the NFL High School Player Development Pro-gram’s National 7-on-7 Tournament.

One team from each region of the 32 NFL programs par-ticipated in the event, which began in pool play based on the teams’ respective divisions. Freedom advanced the finals of the AFC West bracket before losing to the Broncos’ represen-

tative. The Seahawks defeated the New York Jets 37-10 to claim the overall championship.

The roster Freedom traveled with featured dante mays, Darrell Daniels, Nenwon Gbilia, Bryan Wargo, Aaron Mullins, Tyler Saude, devontae young, Nathan Mallet, Johnell Greene, Christian montion, Andrew Werkheiser and Joe mixon.

“The hardest part of the whole thing was choosing 12 players,” Freedom coach Kevin Hartwig said. “A lot of guys contributed to us qualifying, but we could only take 12 so we had to pick guys who could go two-ways. It was tough.” ✪

— SportStars staff

July 19, 2012

Phillip WaltonMacKenzie Dube swings for a key base hit

during one of the many scoring rallies the Antioch Little League Senior All-Stars put together during their District 4 final against East County. Antioch won 14-4 and advanced to the Division 2 Tourna-ment, which Antioch Little League plays host to

through July 22.

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17SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ July 19, 2012

Viewers tuning in to a PGA or LPGA event on television will hear the rare reference to Sacramento on occasions when Spencer Levin, Nick Watney, and Natalie Gulbis are contending. For the most part, Sacramento is not considered a fertile breeding ground

for professional golfers.But the next generation of golfers from the Sacramento region are hoping to change that

perception.“It would be nice to see multiple locals on the pro tours soon,” said Christian Brothers golfer

and Elk Grove resident Hunter Rappleye. “That’s the ultimate goal for a lot of the young golfers from Sacramento, and the talent is here to make that happen.”

Local golfers have been busy — and successful — in the last few months. Recent high school graduates and other junior golfers have won high-profile tournaments and qualified to play in national and international fields, so that the state capital of California might be more synony-mous with the golf capital of California.

“Sacramento has always been a hotbed for golf,” said Angie Dixon, Executive Director of The First Tee of Greater Sacramento. “We have had some great players come through before, but we definitely have some kids with a lot of talent. It has definitely been a banner year.”

The region’s “banner year” started back in early June when the Sac-Joaquin Section sent one team and five individuals to the California Interscholastic Federation State Golf Champi-onships at San Gabriel Country Club in Southern California. Granite Bay won the team title, Austin Smotherman of Del Oro-Loomis captured the individual championship, and two other individuals finished in the top 10.

Local boys’ golfers have carried that momentum into the summer and built on it to make an impact in numerous events. Ponderosa High School’s Corey Pereira, who will be a senior in the fall, tied for first at the 83rd Annual Northern California Golf Association (NCGA) Junior Championship at Spyglass Hill Golf Club in Pebble Beach earlier this month before falling to Dublin’s Taylor Bromley on the first playoff hole.

Several local players also participated at the California State Amateur in Santa Barbara in June. Taylor Knoll, a 2011

graduate of Folsom High School, advanced to match play and advanced to the final 16 for the highest area finish.

Rappleye and Christian Brothers teammate Andrej Bevins qualified for the U.S. Junior Amateur in New England (July 16-21) with top-four finishes at the Yolo Fliers qualifier in June. Cameron Champ, a 16-year-old amateur from Rocklin, also qualified for the U.S. Junior Amateur with a victory in a qualifier in Long Beach. The quick trip entailed a flight to Southern California, a round of golf, and a flight home in the span of 36 hours, but the payoff was a week-long trip to the East Coast to join other locals in competition with the na-tion’s best young golfers.

Champ, who is home-schooled and has committed to play collegiately at Texas A&M in two years, believes that the local golf scene is in a definite high cycle.

“It comes in waves sometimes, but we have some great tal-ents from around Sacramento,” he said. “I think that once this

Sacramento region has always had noteworthy golfers, but its recent wave of amateurs may be its best yet

Story by Jim McCue • Photo by James K. Leash

Recent Christian Brothers-Sacramento graduate Kit Carson will continue his golf career at University of Nevada in the fall.

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group of kids matures further, it can get even better.”Champ also participated in the Nature Valley First Tee Open at Pebble Beach,

a Champions Tour event that featured junior players from more than 60 national First Tee chapters. The First Tee of Greater Sacramento (TFTGS) had six golfers in the field where juniors were paired with senior golfers to compete as teams and individuals on the courses at Del Monte and Pebble Beach. Champ finished in a tie for second place as TFTGS placed three golfers in the top five.

Kit Carson, a recent Christian Brothers graduate, finished in fourth place — one shot behind Champ — to cap off his golf season before heading to Reno where he will play collegiately for the University of Nevada. The experience at Pebble Beach, and his senior season at Christian Brothers, were crowning achievements for a young athlete who began his sole focus on golf at an older age than most on the junior golf scene.

“I played all sports as a kid and didn’t really know that golf was going to be my thing,” Carson said. “I started with The First Tee at 11 and played a little, but finally came into my game last sum-mer.”

The success and business of the summer junior ama-teur circuit is not exclusive to boys.

Local girls golfers, includ-ing St. Francis-Sacramento’s Emily Laskin, have been equally active. Laskin was part of the local First Tee contingent at Pebble Beach and was selected to be one of six junior golfers to be paired with a senior teammate for a five-hole alternate-shot skins game. Laskin, along with pro Scott Simpson, birdied the fi-nal hole of the competition — No. 18 at Pebble Beach — to win a pair of skins and $8,000 for TFTGS.

Laskin has not restricted her summer golf travel to car trips down the coast, either. She recently flew to San Di-ego to play in the Callaway Junior World Golf Championship and will visit North Carolina and Florida for international junior events before her focus reverts to re-turning the Troubadours to elite status in the Sac-Joaquin Section.

“We are still rebuilding with me being one of five juniors for next year,” she said. “It’s harder to stay on top in the SJS because everyone locally is so passionate and driven. There is a lot of great talent in the area and we all put pressure on ourselves to do well. We expect a high level of play now from everyone around here.”

The girls’ high school golf season will ramp up immediately when school starts in August, allowing some of the local junior golfers the opportunity to carry the momentum of elite competition from the summer into league and section play. Local golfers — both boys and girls — will aim for a berth in the U.S. Amateur Championships in early August before heading back to school with a select few competitors possibly missing classes to tee it up against the nation’s best amateurs.

Regardless of how Sacramento golfers fare at the U.S. Amateur events, there is little argument that the region is rising at the amateur level and could be a bigger player on the professional tours in the near future.

“I think that the quality of junior golf in Sacramento is as good as it has been in a long time,” Rappleye said. “There are some premiere players with lots of talent and I think that we can put Sacramento on the map.” ✪

stanDOut summerSacramento-Area prep golfers

are really putting themselves and the region on the map this sum-mer. Following are some of the key names and the high-profile tourna-ments in which they’ve played in or qualified for over the past couple months.

bOys■ Austin Smotherman (Del Oro-loomis/southern method-ist university) — California State Amateur (La Cumbre CC, Santa Barbara), U.S. Amateur Qualifier (Butte GC, Chico)■ Hunter Rappleye (Christian brothers-sacramento) — AJGA Junior (Ruby Hill GC, Pleasanton), U.S. Junior Amateur (The Golf Club of New England, Stratham, NH)■ Andrej bevins (Christian brothers) — U.S. Amateur Public Links Championships (Soldier Hollow GC, Wasatch, UT), U.S. Junior Amateur (The Golf Club of New England, Stratham, NH), U.S. Amateur Qualifier (Spring Creek GC, Ripon)■ Cameron Champ (texas A&m commitment) — Nature Valley First Tee Open (Pebble Beach), U.S. Junior Amateur (The Golf Club of New England, Stratham, NH)■ Kit Carson (Christian broth-ers/university of Nevada) — Cali-fornia State Amateur (La Cumbre CC, Santa Barbara), Nature Valley First Tee Open (Pebble Beach)■ Corey Pereira (Ponderosa-Shingle Springs) — NCGA Junior Championship (Spyglass Hill GC, Pebble Beach)

girls■ Emily Laskin (St. Francis-sacramento) — Nature Valley First Tee Open (Pebble Beach), Callaway Junior World Golf Cham-pionship (San Diego), Optimist International Junior Golf Champi-onship (PGA National, Palm Beach Gardens, FL)■ Kelsey Ulep (Whitney-Rocklin) — Nature Valley First Tee Open (Pebble Beach)■ Clare Sorensen (Christian brothers) — U.S. Women’s Ama-teur Championship (The Country Club, Cleveland, OH)

The First TeeSt. Francis-Sacramento golfer Emily

Laskin teamed up with with PGA Cham-pions Tour player Scott Simpson to win $8,000 in a skins event at the Nature

Valley First Tee Open at Pebble Beach.

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WorldCLASS“I knew it was going to be intense,” said Oderah Chidom after a USA

Basketball tryout in May. “I didn’t know it was going to be this in-tense.”

Chidom, a 6-3 (at least) forward from Bishop O’Dowd-Oakland, was in Colorado Springs with 32 other girls, battling for a spot on the Under-17 team that would play for the FIBA World Championship Aug. 17-26 in Am-sterdam. Chidom was a relative unknown with no previous USA Basketball tryout experience, and she was facing long odds.

All 12 gold medalists from the U16 team that had won the FIBA Americas in Mexico in 2011 were returning, plus Diamond DeShields, who had played for the 2011 World Championship U17 team. In addition, players like Gabby Green (St. Mary’s-Berkeley), who had just missed making that U-16 team, were in camp as well, ready to prove to the selection committee that mistakes had been made.

“Before I got here, I thought about Diamond coming back,” said Green (who many thought should have made the team in 2011) in May. “How am I going to fit in?

“Everybody’s great here.”Chidom, a relatively slender forward, felt the same way. “I’m average,” she

said at the time, sizing up the competition. “I have to use my speed and quickness.”

Also working against her was the USA Basketball decision to have her play in the paint, which she didn’t even do that much at O’Dowd, given the pres-ence of K.C. Waters and Breanna Brown, two other elite posts.

Add in the altitude, the pressure, and the level of play, and Chidom was challenged every second. “AAU is nothing compared to this,” she said. “You can’t take any plays off.”

Chidom didn’t, but even so, she wasn’t confident she would make the team.“They called us in the last day, and made a 15-minute speech about how

we’re all elite players, and we all did great, but no one really heard the speech. We were all nervous,” she says. “They started reading off some names, and they didn’t call me, so I thought I didn’t make the team — but that was the shuttle list for the airport.

“Then they started announcing who made it, and because my last name starts with a “C,” I was second. I just stopped listening then,” she says. “I was

In three years, Oderah Chidom went from a raw freshman

to NorCal’s only representative on the U17 National team

By ClAy KAllAm | Contributor

Butch Noble

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shocked, surprised and excited.”So despite all the hurdles she faced, Chidom had come out of nowhere to qualify for a World

Championship team, and will return to Colorado Springs Aug. 1 for nine days of training. She already had a little taste of what to expect in Orlando when the team gathered together for the first time in late May.

“I had my shot blocked five times a day,” she says. “I’m used to dominating at O’Dowd, and whenever something’s wrong, you give the ball to Oderah. But everyone on that team averages 20 a game.”

But there was a time, not that long ago, when the only 20 a game Chidom was going to get was fouls.

“Her freshman year, she was scary,” says O’Dowd teammate and point guard Ariell Bostick. “If you were going to get hurt, you’d get hurt by Oderah. She tried to block everything.”

O’Dowd coach Malik McCord has to agree. “If you could see some old videos … oh my God,” he says. “She was so raw, but by the end of her freshman year, I’d never seen that much growth in that short a time.”

“She finally learned to calm down,” says Bostick. “When I saw her play last summer, I knew who I was going to pass to.”

But that improvement hasn’t af-fected her outgoing personality.

“She’s goofy,” says McCord. “She’s a great kid and she doesn’t let it go to her head.”

McCord also knew Chidom was primed to surprise some people in Colorado Springs. “Oderah is taller than me, and I’m 6-3, and people don’t realize how strong she is. She’s solid — she’s muscle.”

And she’s also had to use that muscle.

“She practiced against K.C. (Wa-ters) and Bree (Brown) every day,” McCord added. “And they go to war.”

And here’s a scary thought: “I don’t know if she’s stopped grow-ing.”

Chidom definitely hasn’t stopped growing as a player, as she’s constantly expanding her ho-rizons. This summer, she’s playing for Team Taurasi, which is based in Los Angeles, and she has her sights set on the Nike Nationals in South Carolina July 27-31.

“Our primary goal is to win a Nike Nationals’ banner,” says Chi-dom of Team Taurasi, which includes East Bay players Green, Waters and Mariya Moore (Sale-sian). Things didn’t get off to a great start, though, when the group went 0-3 at the prestigious Boo Williams event this past spring.

“Boo Williams was our first tournament together, and there were only three returners,” she says. “It was pretty frustrating — we constantly use Boo as a reminder.”

And even though Team Taurasi doesn’t practice that much because of the geographically scattered roster, that doesn’t mean Chidom isn’t working on getting better. “I spend three hours in the gym a day,” she says, often working with Piedmont High coach Bryan Gardere.

“I’m most comfortable at the four, but in college, I’ll be smaller than the other girls. Right now, my body doesn’t match up,” she says, intimating that she would like to move to the three at the next level.

First, though, comes USA Basketball, and for the FIBA Worlds, she’ll be at power forward — but even so, there are adjustments to be made.

“There’s different kinds of basketball all across the country,” Chidom says, and that first train-ing in Orlando was helpful in getting used to how her teammates approached the game. “I’m used to outlet, slow it down, run a play, but the Southern girls want to run the floor every time.”

The Under-18 players were also in Florida, and they gave Chidom and the other newcom-ers some insights into international basketball. “Every single team will play its best against

Jonathan HawthorneChidom’s nickname among her teammates is “Slinky,” due to moves like this one from the

2012 NorCal Final against Miramonte-Orinda.

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the USA,” Chidom says. “Everyone wants to prove themselves.

“Our coaches keep telling us that no matter how short they are, where they come from or how bad they look warming up, we have to be ready,” she says. “Last year, the team was down at halftime, and we don’t want that to happen.”

But Chidom also knows she needs to be fresh mentally and physically come late Au-gust, so she’s going to take it easier on the summer circuit. “Last summer I did the en-tire circuit and by Aug. 1, I was exhausted,” she says. “I don’t need AAU as much to get a scholarship, so I’ll go to Phoenix (for a tour-nament with Team Taurasi) but I won’t play.”

That should get her ready for Nike Na-tionals, and then, a few weeks later it’s off to Italy for training prior to the trip to Amster-dam – and then it’s back home to get ready for the high school season, in which not only is O’Dowd favored to repeat as the Division III state champion, but is also expected to be ranked in the top 10 in the nation.

Chidom, though, is ready to carry the load, and even though she’s already exceeded ex-pectations, she’s still a developing player.

“She’s not even as close to being as good as she’s going to be,” says McCord, which is a scary thought for players in California, across the country and in fact, around the world. ✪

2012 usa wOmen’s u17 wOrlD champiOnship rOsterPlayer Pos. Ht. High schoolLindsay Allen G 5-8 St. John’s College (Washington D.C.)Oderah Chidom F 6-3 Bishop O’Dowd-OaklandKaela Davis G 6-2 Buford (GA)Diamond DeSheilds G 6-1 Norcross (GA)Rebecca Greenwell G 6-1 Owensboro Catholic (KY)Linnae Harper G 5-7 Whitney Young (IL)Kai James F 6-4 William T. Dwyer (FL)Erica McCall F 6-3 Ridgeview-Bakersfield Taya Reimer F 6-3 Hamilton Southeastern (IN)Mercedes Russell C 6-5 Springfield (OR)Brianna Turner G/F 6-3 Pearland (TX)Jessica Washington G 5-8 Tulsa (OK)

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Welcome to Impulse, your one-stop shop for gadgets, gizmos and gear. Compiled by Erik Stordahl, Impulse provides you with all the latest and greatest and what’s currently hot on the market.

This week we give you the lowdown on how to win a whole lotta autographs. We’re talking a soccer ball full of ‘em. Keep reading to find out how one of these can be yours

■ WHO: California Storm, women’s professional soccer team, featuring the likes of legends Sissi and Brandi Chastain.

■ WHERE: They’ll be at the California Storm event at Tesoro Fields in Concord on Aug. 11. The event is being put on by California Assemblywoman Susan A. Bonilla in celebra-tion of the 40th anniversary of Title IX. There will be a clinic from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. followed by the Cal Storm playing an exhibition match from 1-3 p.m. when they take on the Central Val-ley Soccer Club’s Team Revolution.

■ HOW: Like us on Face-book and you’re entered to win. Could it get any easier? No! You can also spread the word and have your friends like us too (but why would you do that if you’re trying to win??).

■ WHy: Because we love sports. And we love our readers. And really because we’re amazing.

■ rECAP: Just like us on Face-book and you’re entered to win one of these autograph-filled soccer balls. Also, come on out to the Cal Storm event Aug. 11 at Tesoro Fields. RSVP for a spot now!

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25SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ July 19, 2012

From my experience working with speed athletes and sprinters on the Berkeley High track and field team, certain injuries occur time and again, and they are

preventable if spotted and addressed early. Two injuries that have a distinct relationship with each

other are hip flexor strains and hamstring strains. The hip flexor and the hamstring are both muscle groups that need to be powerful and flexible for an athlete to run efficiently. These two injuries seem to happen the most with sprinters because of the range of motion of the hip during high-speed running and the explosive demands of the muscles that provide propulsion when sprinting.

The hip flexor and the hamstring are both prime movers when running and require strength, power and flexibility. If either is tight or lacks sufficient range of motion, then a muscle pull or a “strain” may occur.

A strain is the technical name for a pulled muscle and usually occurs when a tight muscle is over-stretched. Sprinting requires a significant amount of flexibility of the muscles that surround the hip joint and if there are any obstructions then the athlete will not be able to run at their top speed, and these limitations may predispose them to injury.

If you have limitations in hip flexor or hamstring flexibility then you need to do some specific stretches that focus on your specific range of motion deficits. Before you run or work out, a thorough Dynamic Stretching Program is useful to warm up the body and increase your hip flexibility to mimic the needs of your sport.

To increase flexibility of the hip flexor, a half kneeling hip flexor stretch is effective and easy to use. Start kneeling on one knee with the

opposite foot in front. Lean forward, keeping your chest up and your abdominals tight. You should feel a slight stretch in the front of the hip. If you do not, raise both arms straight up to elongate the front of the body and target the hip flexor. Hold for 10 seconds and repeat five times on each side.

To increase flexibility of the hamstring muscle group, try the Doorway Hamstring Stretch after practice. This stretch is great to include in your cool-down or the day after a hard practice to decrease the ‘sore’ feeling in the muscle. Start lying on your back next to a doorway, and raise both legs up into the air so that they are approximately at a 90 degree angle with the floor. Place one foot on the doorway, and slowly lower the other leg down to the floor. You should feel a gentle stretch in the hamstring of the leg supported in

the doorway. Hold the stretch for 30 seconds, and then repeat on the opposite side.

Hip mobility is important for all athletes, but especially for run-ning and sprinting athletes. Keep up your flexibility with these two stretches, and if you have any questions about sports injuries and rehabilitation call the Sports Medicine Center. ✪

James Faison is an Athletic Trainer and a Certified Strength and Conditioning Specialist at the Sports Medicine For Young Athletes, a division of Children’s Hospital Oakland with a facility also located in Walnut Creek. He is also the Head Athletic Trainer at Berkeley High. If you have questions or comments regarding the “Health Watch” column, write the Sports Medicine For Young Athletes staff at [email protected].

Sprinters should pay extra care to hip flexor, hamstrings

James FaisonHealth Watch

The hip flexor and the ham-string are both prime movers when running and require strength, power and flexibility. If either is tight or lacks sufficient range of motion, then a muscle pull or a ‘strain’ may occur.”

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James K. Leash photosJosh Beebe made an impact with both his bat and his arm during Rio Linda’s

run to the District 6 title.

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27SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ July 19, 2012

doWnknuckling

Josh Beebe & his dancing knuckleball boosted the Rio Linda Junior All-Stars to next step of Little League World Series

Long before television cameras brought the thrill of victory and the agony of defeat to South Williamsport, Pa., Little League

Baseball took root in the small town.What began in 1938 as an outlet for young

boys to play organized baseball has become the world’s largest organized youth sports pro-gram with nearly 200,000 teams in more than 80 countries.

Little League’s crown jewel has become its Major League World Series that showcases the organization’s birthplace with multimedia cov-erage of the World Series final. But, Little League Baseball has much more to offer kids (both boys and girls play baseball and softball under the Little League brand) worldwide. With multiple divisions providing games for kids from 8-18, there is plenty of opportunity for ballplayers to capture a Word Series title.

Josh Beebe found himself pitching to get his his Rio Linda All-Star team to the next step of the Juniors (ages 13-14) World Championship tournament.

He had already thrown six shutout innings against West Sacramento, but if he was going to finish the game he was going to need to get the last three outs in just 10 pitches. Pitchers at the Junior level are allowed just 95 pitches in a game.

Beebe allowed a single between three harm-

less groundouts on just seven pitches to end the game without the need of a second pitcher and sending Rio Linda to the Section Tournament in Rocklin.

The Section Tournament is the second step in Little League All-Star tournaments with tickets to South Williamsport; Taylor, Michigan; Ban-gor, Maine; Easley, South Carolina; Portland, Oregon; Kirkland, Washington; Lower Sussex, Delaware; and Kalamazoo, Michigan as the prize being eyed by boys and girls from across the country and the world.

California has 72 districts, including five in the Greater Sacramento Region, which include 8-12 leagues in each district. The local districts completed their All-Star tournaments which send the winners to sectional tournaments. The road to the World Series then moves through regional play before the top dozen or so teams convene at the traditional World Series sites for each division.

While the Little League World Series in Wil-liamsport remains the organization’s highest-profile championship, kids from Rio Linda and West Sacramento recently squared off in Ante-lope with the District 6 Junior League Champi-onship on the line. The winner advanced to the Section 4 tournament in Rocklin with aspira-tions of making it all the way to Taylor, Michi-gan in August.

“These two leagues are traditionally at the top

By Jim mcCuE | Contributor

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little league rOaD tO the wOrlD series

bAsEbAll■ Major League (age 11-12)Western Regional: Aug. 5-13, San BernardinoWorld Series: Aug. 16-27, South Williamsport, PA■ Junior League (age 13-14)Western Regional: Aug. 2-9, IrvineWorld Series: Aug. 12-18, Taylor, MI■ Senior League (age 13-16)Western Regional: Aug. 2-9, OntarioWorld Series: Aug. 12-18, Bangor, ME■ Big League (age 15-18)Western Regional: July 15-20, Bremerton, WAWorld Series: July 25-August 1, Easley, SC

sOFtbAll■ Major League Western Regional: July 23-29, San BernardinoWorld Series: Aug. 11-17, Portland, OR■ Junior LeagueWestern Regional: Aug. 3-10, Marana, AZWorld Series: Aug. 12-18, Kirkland, WA■ Senior League Western Regional: July 28-Aug. 3, Missoula, MTWorld Series: Aug. 7-13, Lower Sussex, DE■ Big LeagueWestern Regional: July 26-31, PalmdaleWorld Series: Aug. 4-10, Kalamazoo, MI

tOP: Rio Linda’s Will Robinson safely slides into second during the District 6 final. bOttOm: Rio left fielder Demetrio Hernandez makes a diving grab.

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of our District,” said District 6 Administrator Wayne Del Nero at the title game, “but teams from our district have not ad-vanced past the sections for some years. There are some very strong teams out from the other districts in our section.”

When the final out was recorded in Rio Linda’s 4-0 victory, the players had no worries about who they would face in the section tournament or how strong the team might be. The most important thing to manager Josh Klein’s ballplayers was winning the race to the outfield fence to claim the District 5 Junior League Champions banner which hung in left field.

“Last year, the Juniors went to Sections, but I was not here,” Klein said of Rio Linda’s repeat District 6 title. “We’ll take a day off and get right back to practice to see what we can do against some real good teams.”

Beebe was strong throughout the District tournament, pitching a pair of shutouts against West Sacramento. In round-robin play, Rio Linda beat West Sacramento 10-0 before blank-ing the team again in the championship game, 4-0.

“That was as good as I have seen him working both sides of the plate and keeping batters off balance,” Klein said of his ace’s performance in the title game. “His off-speed pitches were working really well.”

Beebe’s off-speed arsenal includes a “spike,” change-up, and a knuckleball that is sometimes as much of a mystery to Beebe as it is to opposing batters.

“I don’t know where it is going to go exactly, but neither does the batter,” he said of his primary pitch. “I have been throwing it since I was 10 and have gotten better at getting it

over the plate to keep batters off balance.”After the post-game celebration, the Rio Linda players, who

went through the District 6 tournament without a blemish, were optimistic about advancing past the Section tournament to play in the Western Regional in Irvine beginning Aug. 2.

“I think we have a good chance to advance,” Beebe said. “We have very good pitching and defense that has gotten us this far, and we just need to keep playing well.”

Rio Linda will have to face All-Star champions from Dis-tricts 5, 7, 11, and 54 in order to punch a ticket to Irvine where the stakes and competition continue to rise.

All of the local districts and sections have teams with dreams of playing in a Little League World Series. In addition to the televised spectacular that is the Major League World Series (ages 11-12), boys’ world titles will be earned in the Ju-nior League (13-14), Senior League (13-16), and Big League Baseball (15-18). On the softball side, world championships are up for grabs in the Junior League, Senior League, and Big League Softball (14-18).

While very few, if any, local kids will be praised by Brent Musburger on live television, the dreams of baseball glory are just as strong.

In the end, each boy or girl dreaming of a World Series will remember their own thrill of victory or agony of defeat and cherish it regardless of whether the memories can be recorded on their home DVR. Because, in the end, it is still the same game that was organized for kids to play in South Williams-port more than 70 years ago. ✪

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Liz ElliottTri Steps

Have you ever tried to reach for your water bottle, and not been able to put it back?   Drinking from your water bottle and returning it to the holder is actually a very

complicated, multi-piece skill, with progressions. Even seasoned riders have trouble with this skill when in adverse conditions such as high wind, lots of traffic, bad road conditions, or even just hitting a bump or being distracted.

To be the most safe for yourself and for others on the road, you should feel comfortable, safe, and able to handle your bike even during times of adversity. The bike portion is the second leg of a triathlon, and the distance is typically half of the race. As a triathlete, you will need to understand the fit, form, safety and handling of cycling, feel comfortable riding in traffic and in emergency situations, as well feel ready to complete the bike leg of the race with good fitness following the swim. 

In general, for the cycle portion of training and the race, skills you will need to know:

■ How to eat and drink while holding your line.■ Parts of the bike.■ What to carry in your “tool kit”.■ How to change your tube effectively and efficiently, in case

you need to in the race.■ How to ride consistently, allowing other cyclists and motor-

ists to predict your movements. ■ To learn these valuable skills, join a club or find a bike

handling clinic near you.  

learn & practice bike hanDling skillsWhether you are very new to biking, or have been riding for a

while, it’s important to learn and/or review good bike handling techniques, to be better prepared to handle emergency situa-tions, and just perpetuate better riding overall. Many local tri-athlon clubs offer bike handling classes or clinics for beginners through advanced riders.  

The annual Early Bird Criterium Training Series in Fremont of-fers a wonderful introduction to bike handling clinic series every January for beginners through intermediate cyclists. Each Sunday of January includes a series of clinics for different categories of riders, including a women’s-only clinic. Each weekend builds on what was learned the previous week, and includes a practice training race where professional cycling teachers ride with you and teach you during the “race.” Each clinic is only $25, which is a steal. Other comparable clinics are upwards of $100 each.

safety On the rOaDWhen on a bike on the road, you are a vehicle and must follow

the same rules as motorists. Riding on the road will give you a whole new appreciation for cyclists when you are a driver.

■ Be Predictable — Hold your line, use predictable hand sig-nals, and don’t swerve into traffic. You want to ride so that motor-ists and other cyclists are not wondering what you will do next.  

■ Build Cyclist/Motorist Relations — Your best safety features are your eyes and your smile. Keep your eyes open all the time for hazards on the road, but also to make eye contact with mo-torists when stopped at lights and other times you are changing positions. Make eye contact, give a head nod, and smile. A smile goes a long way.  It helps the motorist see you as a person, not just that looney in spandex. ✪

Liz Elliott is the Head Coach of the Tri-Valley Triathlon Club based in Dublin. Liz specializes in preparing beginner triathletes for their first race(s). She was an All-American swimmer in col-lege, and has over 20 years experience in teaching and coaching swimming. Contact her at [email protected].

Get on your bike: Basic cycling for races

reminDers fOr rOaD riDing:◆ Wear a helmet securely fastened to your head under the chin at all times. ◆ Ride single file. ◆ Stay as far to the right of the road as safely possible. That does not mean riding in the dirt. If there is no shoulder or bike lane, ride to the left of the white line, and stay there. ◆ Do not make un-necessary or sudden swerves into traffic, even when reaching for or putting away a water bottle.◆ Use hand signals to show direction and stopping. ◆ Use your voice. Call out debris in the path to other riders, and your di-rection you are head-ing. For example, when passing, yell “On your left.” ◆ Always pass on the left. ◆ Stop at every stop sign and light. You are held to the same traffic rules as a car.

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It seems nowadays parents and coaches are more confused than ever on how to improve their athlete’s conditioning. More and more,

we are seeing a prescription of shorter, higher intensity conditioning and a complete misuse of aerobic conditioning — if it’s done at all.

The rationale has been that what we do in sports is move fast and usually in a bunch of short, explo-sive sprints throughout the game. We are just wast-ing our time if we have our athletes develop their aerobic system using less intense methods, as this is non-specific and will just make our athletes slower.

Unfortunately this couldn’t be further from the truth. Yes, your athletes do need to work on the anaerobic component of their conditioning as it fuels their explosive movements. On the flip side, they also need to develop certain aspects of their aerobic energy system if they want to develop a high level of conditioning.

This is a complex subject and one that deserves more explanation than I will have space for in this article. So hope-fully this leads those of you who train or give advice to young athletes on conditioning to spend more time educating yourselves on this subject before prescribing a conditioning protocol.

So what is conditioning? It really is a measure of how well an athlete is able to meet the energy demands of their sport, and is much more than just cardio.

Each sport requires a different combination of power

(anaerobic) and endurance (aerobic). Notice how I said ‘combination’. Some train more on one side of the spectrum than the other, but still most fall somewhere in the middle.

With conditioning there are other factors that play a role in the energy system development of young athletes and an assessment of resting heart rate, heart rate reserve, anaerobic threshold, as well as recovery heart rate is just the beginning.

I believe we’re seeing the lower intensity workouts being bashed and condemned for being useless for most field and court sport. This is a huge misunderstanding. The aerobic system plays a key role in performance for all sports. I’m not

condoning jogging long distances, as developing aerobic power is more complex than that.

In simple terms, the anaerobic system (without oxygen) produces energy at high rates for very short periods (sprint-ing). The result is an increase of metabolic byproducts in the muscles that make athletes fatigue faster. By solely relying on this energy system and ignoring the other energy systems in conditioning programs, athletes are missing a big component of conditioning.

The aerobic system (with oxygen) clears out these byprod-ucts and restocks the mechanisms of an athlete’s anaerobic metabolism at a higher rate. This is the real key to developing the kind of conditioning that brings the competition to their knees.

To be effective, an athlete’s biological power must be improved, which includes cardiovascular, neuromuscular, metabolic and hormonal systems, including increasing the specific components of the aerobic system (oxygen supply from the cardiovascular system and oxygen utilization of the working muscles).

The level of biological power development is dependent upon the strategies implemented in their entire training program. These components combine for optimal improvement in aero-bic power, as well as anaerobic and the athletes performance.

The key to increasing the aerobic power of athletes is to in-crease the amount of energy their body can produce with the aerobic system, as well as how effectively an athlete’s muscles can utilize this energy to generate power.

Unfortunately, many athletes lack conditioning because their aerobic power has never been developed properly and can’t produce nearly enough power. The result is decreased aerobic power and a lower level of conditioning.

It’s helpful to educate yourself or find a professional who will appropriately assess your athletes before throwing them through a conditioning program that could be getting them nowhere fast. ✪

Tim Rudd is an International Youth Conditioning Association specialist in youth conditioning (level 3), speed and agility (level 2), and nutrition specialist (level 1). For more informa-tion on anything you read in Training Time, email him at [email protected].

July 19, 2012

Tim Rudd for IYCA Training Time

Conditioning is much more than just going for long runs

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33SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ July 19, 2012

bAsEbAll/sOFtbAllAll American Sports AcademyAll American Sports Academy aims to train and educate all student athletes on the correct physical skills and mechanics needed to compete at all levels, as well as understand the proper practice habits and time management skills needed to improve their game. The organization is holding camps at various locations through July 26. Info: (209) 833-2255, Email: [email protected] BaseballWe are a year-round competitive baseball program based in Danville. The Camp focuses on teamwork, hustle and sportsmanship. We also offer small group training as well as one-on-one training. Info: [email protected] or 925-708-3173.Cabernet Baseball ClubThe Livermore-based club hosts baseball and softball camps for players ages 8-14. Lil’ Baseball also offered for ages 3-7. 925-416-1600, http://cabernet.thepitchingcenter.com.East bay youth sportsBaseball is Fun Beginner Camp. July 25-Aug. 4, 9 a.m.-noon, Mon.-

Thur. at Tice Valley Park; Extended day/week available with Deluxe Sport Option. Ages 5-9. $35/$75. Registration: 925-952-4450, www.walnutcreeksportsleague.com.EJ sportsEJ Sports provides individual, group, team, coaching and manager clinics in many levels of baseball. Among the numerous different services offered, the Spring Clinic, Summer Clinic and the Fall League for children of Little League age. Contact EJ Sports for a list of upcoming clinics. Info: 925-866-7199, www.ejsports.com.the Pitching CenterIn an effort to develop baseball players to their full potential, The Pitching Center has become the Total Player Center (TPC), a full-service baseball/softball training academy. Age- and skill-specific programs available for students age 8-High School. Info: 925-416-1600, www.thepitchingcenter.com.

bAsKEtbAllCalStarsThe Stars Basketball Academy (SBA) is pleased to announce our youth and high school summer

camps. The SBA is a fundamental based skills development camp for kids in 3rd grade-High School. We offer three youth (3rd-8th) sessions and two high school (9th-12th) sessions. Go to www.calstars.org for more info.FastBreak BasketballMargaret Gartner, the highly-decorated girls basketball coach for Carondelet High in Concord, leads this girls basketball camp focused on fundamentals. One week-long session remains: Session V, July 23-27, Grades 4-10. Info: www.FastBreakBball.com; or email [email protected]

CHEErCheergyms.comSix camps are offered through July: Coaches Camp, Freedom High School 2-day Cheer and Dance Camp, 2-Day Cheer Camps at ALL Cheergyms.com facilities, Jr. High/High School Cheer Camp-California Session 1, Individual/Group Stunt Cheer Camp, Jr. High/High School Cheer Camp (Elite)-California Session 2. For more info: 925- 685-8176, 866-685-7615, [email protected]; www.cheergyms.com.East bay sports AcademyEast Bay Sports Academy offers the best in gymnastics and cheerleading training. Our top of the

line recreational and competitive programs earned us the exclusive “Best in the East Bay” award for Best Gymnastics Classes 2011. All of our team camps are custom-built to complement your coaching needs and team goals. Info: 925-680-9999, www.EastBaySportsAcademy.com.Xtreme Cheer CampsXtreme is a competitive All-Star Cheerleading, Dance and Recreational Tumbling Gym in Antioch. All of our camp classes are fast-paced, fun and geared toward achieving your child’s goals. Info: 925-565-5464; [email protected]

ENriCHmENtdianne Adair ProgramsCome join any of our eight Dianne Adair summer sites for our fun and exciting summer program. Each week campers will be able to choose from several camps, including sports, fashion, drama, CSI, science and so many more. In addition to our weekly camps, we offer weekly field trips and in-house

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entertainment. Field trips and camps vary by site. Please consult your site of choice for more details. Bring in this article and receive half off our $40 summer registration fee. Info: www.dianneadair.org.

FitNEssFit 2 the Core As a Youth Conditioning, Speed/Agility and Nutrition Specialist with the International Youth Conditioning Association, Fit-2-The-Core Training Systems offers an innovative approach to getting athletes back on the field post-rehabilitation (which gets athletes to normal function). For F2C’s Back to Sports programs we offer training weekdays, with 2 days/week or 3 days/week options. Sign up today for your two-week free pass at www.fasteryoungathletes.com, or call 925-639-0907 for more information.

Walnut Creek Sports & FitnessWalnut Creek Sports & Fitness is offering a wide range of different sports fitness camps and classes in 2012. Here are three we’re featuring. Pilates for Sports — An ideal form of fitness for athletes to improve performance & prevent injuries. Hardcore Golf Fitness — A four-week golf-specific fitness camp is the ultimate physical conditioning program for golfers of any age who want to take their game to the next level. TRX Team Fitness —A cutting-edge six-week small group personal training program is a team-sports inspired program for athletes of all levels who want results in a challenging, motivating environment. For all info: Contact Bob Boos, Personal Training Director. Phone: (925)932-6400 or email: [email protected]

FOOtbAllFootball UniversityFrom the creators of the U.S. Army All-American Bowl comes a one-of-a-kind football training experience exclusively for the nation’s most elite youth and high school players. Born out of the appreciation that the most successful and skilled football players have mastered great technique, and that for many younger players this level of coaching is simply not available, the Football University (FBU) experience focuses on intense position-specific technique training taught by our expert faculty of former and current NFL coaches who have a passion for sharing this experience with young athletes.

gOlFthe First tee-Contra CostaThe First Tee Summer Camp is a youth development Golf program for boys and girls ages 7-18. Participants will learn about golf and the life skills and values inherent to the game. In addition to golf skills, rules and etiquette, participants are introduced to The First Tee Nine Core Values. Our Summer camps are four days a week, 4 hours/day @ Diablo Creek Golf Course, Concord. We have several weeks and facilities from which to choose. Fee assistance available. Info: Angela Paradise, 925-686-6262, Ext. 0, [email protected]; www.thefirstteecontracosta.org. The First Tee-OaklandThe First Tee of Oakland participants receive a minimum of 12 hours of instruction over an eight-week period. Instruction is conducted at three City of Oakland affiliate golf courses. Each of the golf courses donates their range, golf course and classroom use. We introduce the game of golf in a way that allows participants to progress with the mechanics required, and that teaches the values of the game, celebrates the fitness aspect of playing, and is offered at little or no cost. Info: 510-352-2002, [email protected]; www.thefirstteeoakland.org.The First Tee-Silicon ValleyThe First Tee of Silicon Valley develops youth through the game of golf throughout Silicon Valley. We impact the lives of young people by providing educational programs that build character, instill life-enhancing values and promote healthy choices though the game of golf. Seasonal classes are offered at Rancho del Pueblo Golf Course (San Jose) and Palo Alto Golf Course. We welcome participants ranging from second to twelfth grade. Scholarships are available upon request. www.thefirstteesanjose.org.The First Tee-Tri-ValleyWe’re a youth development organization using golf and its etiquette to teach important life skills and core values. We offer seasonal The First Tee Life Skills Experience Classes and Summer Camps for youth ages 7-17, held at the Pleasanton Golf Center on the Alameda County Fairgrounds. Once-a-week Summer Classes will be held Monday-Saturday beginning in June. Junior Golf Summer Camps will be held 8-10 a.m., Tuesday-Friday. Upcoming camps begin on the following Tuesdays: July 23 & July 30. Info: Call our office, 925-462-7201; www.TheFirstTeeTriValley.org.

HOrsEbACK ridiNgEarthquake ArabiansSpring and summer camps are around the corner for Earthquake Arabians! Registration is OPEN.

Log on to www.earthquakearabians.com for more info. 925-360-7454.

lACrOssEAtherton/Vitality LacrosseJoin Atherton Lacrosse and learn the basics of the game in their spring, summer and fall camps. Every camper receives a t-shirt and access to the best high school, college and professional lacrosse coaches in the Bay Area with an extremely low coach to camper ratio. Every camper needs a lacrosse stick — we have partnered with Sling It! Lacrosse to bring the best value possible. Go to www.athertonlacrosse.com for more info. Sign up with Vitality Lacrosse to join one of their summer leagues in the Peninsula, Marin, East Bay, Petaluma and San Francisco. We serve the entire Bay Area! Info: www.vitalitylacrosse.com.

mArtiAl ArtsusKsAdult and children’s programs, kick box fitness, mixed martial arts. Providing excellence in martial arts instruction and services for the entire family. 925-682-9517; www.usksmartialarts.com.

OutdOOr/AdvENturE sPOrtsDiablo Rock GymWe will be offering kids summer camps every week starting in late June and ending August 18. Sign up for a week at a time or multiple weeks. Ages 6-12; multiple kid and/or week discounts. Call for pricing, 925-602-1000.

rugbyDiablo RugbyYouth rugby is one of the fastest growing sports in the United States. Based in Clayton, our club is dedicated to providing a positive rugby experience for boys at High School, Jr. High School and Youth levels. 925-381-5143, [email protected]; http://diabloyouthrugby.clubspaces.com.

sOCCErHeritage Soccer ClubHSC will conduct its 2nd annual Harvest Cup Tournament in October. HSC is based in the Pleasant Hill/Martinez and serves the surrounding community. Info: www.heritagesc.com.Walnut Creek Soccer ClubThe Walnut Creek Soccer Club uses all the resources available to provide the proper coaching and playing environment for all members. Our goal is for every member of our club to learn and grow as a soccer player and person. We will promote a positive learning environment for our players and families as we work to provide the highest level of coaching and coach’s education. Info: [email protected]; www.wcsc.org.West Contra Costa youth Soccer LeagueOur program caters to competitive youth players ages 8-9 regardless of race, creed, gender or religion. The main focus of our program is not on winning, but on the development of the total soccer player within the framework of a team. We also offer specialized training for strikers and goalkeepers. We desire to promote personal responsibility, fitness, sportsmanship and teamwork. 510-758-5288, http://wccysl.com.

SWIMMING-DIVINGSherman Swim SchoolOur year-round schedule allows children and adults

July 19, 2012

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35SportStars™Support Your Local Business • Say You Found Them In SportStars™ July 19, 2012

to learn, retain and improve their swim skills with little interruption. Lessons are usually offered in sessions of 3-4 weeks. (During the slower months of Fall, Winter and Spring, schedules can be more flexible, such as M-W, W-F, or only one day/week.) We teach from age 9-months to adults, from non-swimmers to competitive levels. Since our lessons are private, they are tailored to each student’s age, ability and readiness. We also offer beginning and competitive diving classes. Beginning sessions typically have three students and are 30 minutes long. Classes are taught in three-week sessions. Info: 925-283-2100, www.ShermanSwim.com.

vOllEybAllPacific Rim VolleyballThrough private lessons, and the opportunity for year-round skills classes, athletes of any age or level can learn and improve the skills needed to gain a competitive edge. Our advanced training, for junior levels (12th grade & below), will provide athletes the opportunity to excel at becoming elite players in preparation for high school and/or collegiate volleyball. Info: www.pacificrimvolleyball.com.U.S. youth Volleyball LeagueThe USYVL is the leader in developing and maintaining youth volleyball leagues for boys and girls ages 7-15. USYVL summer camps

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❒ Army National Guard Recruiter ....................................4

❒ Back Forty B B Q ........................................................21

❒ Battle At The Capital ..................................................19

❒ Big O Tires ...................................................................2

❒ Championship Athletic Fundraising ..........................34

❒ Cheergyms.Com ........................................................29

❒ Children’s Hospital And Research Center ....................25

❒ City Beach Sports Club ..............................................23

❒ Club Sport Renaissance .............................................15

❒ Community Youth Center ..........................................37

❒ Core Volleyball Club ...................................................32

❒ Crowne Plaza ............................................................37

❒ Diablo Car Wash & Detail Center ................................37

❒ Diablo Rock Gym .......................................................30

❒ Diablo Trophies & Awards ..........................................33

❒ E J Sports Elite Baseball Services ...............................32

❒ East Bay Pit Bulls .......................................................38

❒ East Bay Sports Academy .................................... 14, 33

❒ East Bay Summer Camps 2012 ..................................31

❒ Epic Indoor Skatepark................................................18

❒ Excellence In Sport Performance ...............................35

❒ Fit 2 The Core .............................................................36

❒ Franklin Canyon Golf Course ......................................32

❒ Halo Headband .........................................................37

❒ Home Team Sports Photography ...............................30

❒ Hyatt Place Sacramento / Roseville ...........................21

❒ Image Imprint ...........................................................35

❒ Kinders B B Q ...............................................................3

❒ Midway Paintball Park ..............................................33

❒ Mountain Mike’s Pizza ...............................................18

❒ Nor Cal Pro Camp ...........................................................

❒ Norcal Courts .............................................................28

❒ Norcal Grizzlies Baseball ............................................34

❒ Passthaball ................................................................37

❒ Pleasant Hill Youth Football Rebels ...........................32

❒ Red Zone Training ......................................................37

❒ Rocco’s Pizza ........................................................ 22, 30

❒ Rockin Jump .......................................................... 7, 33

❒ San Ramon Sports .....................................................36

❒ Sheldon Jr. Huskies Youth Football & Cheer ...............34

❒ Sherman Swim School ..............................................18

❒ Simply Selling Shirts .................................................30

❒ Sky High Sports .........................................................33

❒ Sports Stars Magazine ...............................................35

❒ State Farm Kelly Sopak Agent....................................22

❒ Stevens Creek Toyota .................................................13

❒ Taking The World By Storm Soccer .............................39

❒ Tesoro Golden Eagle Refinery ......................................9

❒ The First Tee Of Contra Costa ......................................37

❒ The Sports Authority ...................................................5

❒ Trucks Training ..........................................................22

❒ U S K S Martial Arts ...................................................37

❒ Umigo Indoor Kart Racing .........................................40

❒ United States Youth Volleyball League ......................35

❒ Velocity Sports Performance ........................... 8, 30, 33

❒ William Jessup University ..........................................36

Advertiser index

are typically three days, with each day meeting for three hours. Camps are for beginner, intermediate and advanced players, and players will be grouped accordingly, based on age and playing experience. Info: 888-988-7985, www.USYVL.org.

WRESTLINGCommunity youth CenterThe CYC wrestling program offers young athletes the opportunity to participate and excel in one of the world’s oldest sports. The program trains and challenges wrestlers at all age groups from kindergarten through high school, and all experience levels from beginner to champion. The program is nationally recognized under the guidance of Head Coach Mark Halvorson. Info: 925-671-7070, Ext. 229, www.communityyouthcenter.com.

multi-sPOrtVelocity Sports CampsOur Spring Break Sports Specific Summer Camps provide campers with a fun-packed, enjoyable environment where they can increase their athleticism and develop a wider range of skills. Velocity Sports Performance is looking for boys and girls ages 8-14 who are dedicated to making themselves better as athletes. Our Team Training programs are designed to deliver a challenging workout that is organized, educational, progressive and customized for entire sport teams. Info: 925-833-0100, velocitydublin.com.Cal CampsCamps are offered in a variety of sports for girls and boys ages 5-19, with week-long, half-day, full-day and overnight options. Most camps will take place on campus in Berkeley from June through August. Camps include the following sports: Baseball, Boys and Girls Basketball, Boys and Girls Rowing/Crew, Field Hockey, Football, Boys and Girls Golf, Girls Gymnastics, Rugby, Boys and Girls Soccer, Softball, Boys and Girls Swimming, Boys and Girls Tennis, Boys and Girls Volleyball and Girls Water Polo. Information: CalBears.com/camps. Or email [email protected] Mary’s College CampsWe offer boys and girls overnight, day, team and specialty athletic camps. We have camps available for ages 4-18. Dates are posted and registration is open. Our various camp offerings include: Multi-sport, baseball, boys basketball, girls basketball, golf, rugby, girls lacrosse, strength and conditioning, boys soccer, softball, tennis and volleyball. Info: Click “summer camps” at www.smcgaels.com for detailed information and to register online. More info: [email protected], 925-631-4FUN (4386).City of Walnut CreekWe offer 9-13 year-olds a fully-staffed and supervised recreational athletic camp. The program consists of eight weeks of sessions with your choice of two different sports for each of the sessions, with a ninth week session offering bowling. Our camp is specifically designed to teach and develop training skills, basic individual skills, sportsmanship, team strategies and concepts as well as building confidence and self discipline. Sports to choose from include: Tennis, Baseball, Multi-sport, Flag Football, Soccer, Lacrosse, Basketball, Golf, Volleyball and Bowling. Camp offerings run through August 17th. Info: www.walnutcreekrec.org or call 925-943-5858.

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