Sea Kings sizzle from the perimeter
- Share via
Richard Dunn
Depending on your perspective, the orange circular iron attached
to the backboard can either expand or shrink during the course of a
game.
“It’s like golf,” Corona del Mar High boys basketball coach Ryan
Curry said. “If you’re missing putts, then the hole on the greens
gets smaller and smaller.”
In the Sea Kings’ Pacific Coast League battle with host Calvary
Chapel Friday night, the basket seemed to get bigger and bigger for
Corona del Mar, while at times for the Eagles it could have just as
well been swinging back and forth on a pendulum.
“(The Eagles) didn’t shoot very well at the start of the game (0
of 14 in the first quarter), and when you do that, the rim keeps
getting smaller and smaller,” Curry said, following his team’s 65-44
PCL win, which provided about as much energy from beyond the
three-point line as the Calvary Chapel band with four electric
guitars.
CdM drained a season-high 15 three-pointers, while shooting a
sizzling 71.4% from that distance, missing only six times.
The game’s sidebar was CdM senior Kevin Mancillas, who didn’t
start for the first time this season, but came off the bench to spark
the Sea Kings (9-11, 2-2 in the PCL) with a season-high 23 points.
Mancillas was 7 of 9 from three-point territory, tying a career-high
figure, which he accomplished twice last year in separate games
against Laguna Beach.
“I talked to Kevin about not starting and, of course, he wasn’t
thrilled, but if you don’t like something, you do something about it
and he sure did tonight,” said Curry, whose team’s previous
three-point high in a game this season was nine.
For the Sea Kings, who defeated Calvary Chapel earlier this
season, 72-68, in the La Quinta Tournament, the hoop indeed grew as
the game went on -- they netted two three-pointers in the first
quarter, three in the second, four in the third and six in the
fourth.
In addition to Mancillas, CdM’s Brett Matsen (14 points) finished
4 of 5 from three-point land, while point guard Jay Northridge was 2
of 2, Reid Watanabe 1 of 1 and Pancho Seaborn 1 of 4.
The Sea Kings started slowly, turning the ball over five times in
the opening 3:35 and going scoreless for most of the way, until Bart
Welch -- the team’s offensive rebounding machine -- broke the ice
with a putback, followed by Seaborn’s three-pointer with 1:49 on the
clock. Welch ended with nine rebounds (six offensive), while
Mancillas added six rebounds, two assists and two steals. Seaborn had
13 points.
Despite Calvary Chapel coming up empty on every field-goal attempt
in the first quarter, the Sea Kings only led, 8-5, at quarter’s end.
But Corona del Mar outscored the hosts, 19-12, for a 10-point
halftime lead, pulling away after Calvary Chapel (7-13, 1-3) came
within 19-16. Matsen hit a three with 1:23 left in the first half to
trigger an 8-1 scoring run to conclude the opening 16 minutes. Matsen
added another three with 0:43 remaining, then as the Eagles were
working the clock down for the final shot, Matsen made a steal and
subsequent long dish to Adam Freede, who scored on a layup to
complete the fast break with 0:01 left.
CdM enjoyed a second-half opening 10-2 spurt, highlighted by two
Mancillas three-pointers, the last coming with 4:50 to play in the
third quarter from the baseline on an assist by Northridge to give
the visitors a 37-19 edge.
“We had a big-time opening in the third quarter,” Curry said. “All
of the sudden, it was an 18-point game, then the basket gets as big
as the ocean, then you’re really in business.”
When Mancillas nailed another three with 2:17 left in the third
quarter, it gave the Sea Kings a 43-22 advantage. It was his third
three-pointer of the quarter and fourth in the game -- but Mancillas
was merely warming up.
It was bombs away in the fourth quarter as CdM connected on five
straight three-pointers, three by Mancillas, to build a 60-35 lead
with 3:12 still to play.
Joey Jones led Calvary Chapel with 20 points.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.