Architect of San Pedro softball program that won its ninth L.A. City Section title in the last 10 years is "surprised” by top overall coaching honor. Also chosen for statewide recognition is Howard Miller from North of Torrance and Alan Borges from St. Bernard's of Eureka.
By Ronnie Flores, Managing Editor
Contributing: Paul Muyskens, Mark Tennis
When you've been the dominant program in your respective CIF section for over two decades, adding another title to the mantle might not be so unexpected.
At every level of sport, however, a championship season carries special meaning, even for a program that has won nine of the last 10 L.A. City Section softball championships, 10 of the last 12 and 13 of 18.
Such is the case for the San Pedro softball program and its head coach for the last 23 seasons, Tony Dobra. Going into the 2009 season, Dobra had to replace all-state pitcher Taylor Petty (Long Beach State), talented leadoff hitter Korin Cuico (UNLV) and all-state catcher Perelini Koria (Arizona) and her 45 career home runs off a team that finished 29-3 and ranked No. 11 in the state.
Dobra's new crop of girls responded in a big way, using timely hitting and superb defense to claim yet another L.A. City Section title with a 28-4 record and a No. 15 final rating.
For his program's sustained excellence and because of his penchant for continuously molding new talent into a championship-quality club, today Dobra has been named as the 2009 CalHiSports.com State Coach of the Year.
"This is my 13th title and it was a very unique one," remarked Dobra, who has won more reported section tiles than any other coach in state history. "While there are always a couple of kids on the team from the year before, I was thinking 'we're not going to be able to replace them (Petty, Koria, etc.).' I didn't know what to expect this season to tell you the truth."
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Serra of San Mateo legend gains top baseball honor after team wins CCS title in walk-off fashion. Also selected are Bob Anderson from Central Valley of Shasta Lake for medium schools and Brad Gunter Jr. from Valley Christian of Roseville for small schools.
By Mark Tennis, Executive Editor
Contributing: Paul Muyskens
A game-winning base hit to win a championship is one thing, but when it's the last game for a retiring coach – and not just any coach but one of the winningest in Northern California history – the focus is naturally going to be on that coach.
Players at Serra High of San Mateo all knew what was on the line when they batted in the bottom of the seventh inning of the CIF Central Coast Section Div. I championship last month in San Jose with the score tied at 4-4 against league rival Archbishop Mitty of San Jose.
With one out, Luca Ponti singled up the middle. He moved to second on a balk, then went to third on a passed ball. With the infield drawn in, teammate Justin Maffei also singled up the middle to score Ponti and give the Padres a 5-4 victory.
Such was the final sentence in the final chapter in the coaching career of Serra's Pete Jensen. He tried to give all the credit to his players after the game, but even the players had a sense of the moment.
"We've been working all season to give him this championship,” Ponti said. "I can't even say the words how this makes us all feel.”
Jensen himself added: "Boy, I've had so many memories at this school and to win both of our last two games the way we did and now to end it like this is right at the top. We've always had such great kids at Serra and they work so hard at it.”
The championship capped a 30-6 season for the Padres' in Jensen's 23rd and final season. It also was the fourth time he's been handed a CCS championship plaque and put his final career record at 564-181-5.
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He's the rock at Grant of Sacramento with 40 years at the school under his belt, including the last 18 as head football coach. The 2008 season culminated with historic win over Long Beach Poly.
By Mark Tennis, Executive Editor
Days before his Grant High football team of Sacramento took the field to play favored Long Beach Poly in the first CIF Open Division state championship game, Pacers' head coach Mike Alberghini talked about how the stars seemed to align just right for his squad to gain selection into the contest opposite the undefeated Jackrabbits.
But it was more than astrology than pushed the Pacers into that game. It was Alberghini, who then fired up his team for a 25-20 triumph, a final 14-0 record and a final No. 10 national ranking in the ESPN RISE FAB 50.
As a result of that victory, plus all that he's done in both football and baseball during an admirable career at the Del Paso Heights neighborhood school, Alberghini has been selected today as the CalHiSports.com State Coach of the Year.
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The last State Coach of the Year in football from the CIF Sac-Joaquin Section was
Wayne Schneider of Tracy in 1982. The last from the Sacramento area was
Ron Lancaster from Cordova of Rancho Cordova in 1979.
With all of the recent hoopla surrounding Alberghini's football program, people forget just how good he was as a baseball coach at Grant before he switched head coaching positions in 1991.
During the 1980s, in fact, Albergini's Grant teams won more baseball games than any other school in the state other than nearby Cordova with a record of 247-107-3.
Alberghini's 1989 team won the Sac-Joaquin Section title and finished 37-7-1, which is still the state record for most baseball wins in one season. His 1984 team also finished among the top five in the state with a 35-4 record, including a 27-0 start.
In that season, the Pacers were dueling with fellow California school Notre Dame of Sherman Oaks (which also started 27-0) for the No. 1 national ranking before they stumbled at the end. They still set a state record for most hits in a season with 424 that still stands.
Since the 1991 season, when Alberghini took over the Pacer football program, Grant has normally been at the top or near the top of the Sac-Joaquin Section.
Two years ago, he had his most talented team, based on the number of players who signed letters of intent, but the lack of a strong schedule plus the fact that De La Salle of Concord had another unbeaten team led to the Spartans and not Grant being selected to appear as the North representative in the first CIF Division I state bowl game.
Following that season, Alberghini needed young players to step up in 2007. Despite winning seven games, they weren't quite ready and ended up only 7-4, including a first-round playoff loss to Ponderosa of Shingle Springs.
That poor showing was one reason why the Pacers didn't start out this year's preseason state rankings that high. Twelve starters were returning, though, and Alberghini knew he had something special brewing so he tried to line up a stronger schedule. That move paid off more than he could have imagined since two teams that Grant beat Highland of Pocatello, Idaho, and Alta of Sandy, Utah wound up winning championships in their states.
After the Long Beach Poly win, Alberghini raised his own football head coaching record to 192-32-1, which is a winning percentage of 85.33 percent. The only coaches in state history with at least 100 wins and a higher winning percentage are
Bob Ladouceur of De La Salle and
Mike Glines from Central Catholic of Modesto.
The 61-year-old coach is a graduate of Mira Loma High in Sacramento and played himself in the late 1960s for legendary Matadors' coach
Don Brown. Amazingly, two other recent state football coaches of the year also are from Mira Loma
Kevin Rooney from Notre Dame of Sherman Oaks (2002) and
Randy Blankenship from Clovis West of Fresno (1998).
Alberghini's list of football coaching accomplishments at Grant also includes six Sac-Joaquin Section titles, 15 league championships and 18 straight playoff berths.
Among his former players are wide receiver
Donte Stallworth and running back
Onterrio Smith. Stallworth is still in the NFL and played in the Super Bowl last January. Smith, who led the state with 53 touchdowns in 1998, once starred for the Minnesota Vikings. Alberghini also was the high school coach of former Philadelphia Phillies and Seattle Mariners baseball player
Ricky Jordan.
Current college football players and Grant alums
Worrell Williams (senior linebacker at Cal),
Syd-Quan Thompson (junior cornerback at Cal) and
Christian Tupou (freshman defensive tackle at USC) all look like they will have legitimate NFL opportunities down the road as well.
They can all thank Coach A for starting them on their way, but the entire Sacramento prep football community is now thanking him as well.
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