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JANUARY 2014 VOLUME 9 NO. 2 WINTER 2013-2014 One Last Shot After being plagued by injuries for most of his high school career, Derick Newton ’14 wants to show just how strong he and the varsity boys’ basketball team have become. p. 10-13 INSIDE BIG RED GIRLS’ SOCCER The Wolverines’ seniors hope to close their careers with a CIF title p . 14-16 JONATHAN MARTIN ‘08 AND LOCKER ROOM CULTURE p. 17 FOOTBALL INJURIES A look at the varsity football team’s injuries in 2013 p. 22-23

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JANUARY 2014 • VOLUME 9 • NO. 2 • WINTER 2013-2014

One Last ShotAfter being plagued by injuries for most of his high school career, Derick Newton ’14 wants to show just how strong he and the varsity boys’ basketball team have become. p. 10-13

INSIDE

BIG RED Girls’ soccer

The Wolverines’ seniors hope to close their careers with a CIF title

p. 14-16

Jonathan Martin ‘08 and locker rooM culture

p. 17

Football inJuriesA look at the varsity

football team’s injuries in 2013 p. 22-23

BIG RED is a publication of the Harvard-Westlake Chronicle, the upper school newspaper at Harvard-Westlake School, 3700 Coldwater Canyon, Studio City, CA 91604, produced as a part of Advanced Journalism classes. The school has 1,500 students in grades 9-12. For any questions, or to purchase a subscription or to advertise, please contact us at [email protected] or at (818)487-6512. Copies of BIG RED are distributed free on campus to students and faculty and are mailed to friends and family by subscription at $15 per year. Letters to the editor can be sent to editor-in-chief Grant Nussbaum, at [email protected]. BIG RED is a general interest magazine about athletics, including teams and individual athletic pursuits of Harvard-Westlake students and faculty, as well as health and fitness topics. For seasonal coverage of Wolverine teams, see The Chronicle or www.hwchronicle.com.

theStaff

Cover Photo by Grant Nussbaum

On the Cover: In his final season, senior Derrick

Newton will attempt to make a run at both CIF

and State finals this year after being injured

throughout his career as a Wolverine.

adviserKathleen Neumeyer

presentations editorJacob Goodman

editor-in-chiefGrant Nussbaum

managing editorsEric Loeb, Lucy Putnam, Sam Sachs

associate editorsElijah Akhtarzad, Mila Barzdukas, Jordan Garfinkel,

Tyler Graham, Audrey Wilson

staffJack Goldfisher, Caitlin Neapole, Patrick Ryan,

Noa Yadidi

thePlaybook Grant Nussbaum: Derick Newton 10

Eric Loeb: Girls’ Soccer 14Although the girls’ soccer team has never been crowned CIF Champion, they hope to make a push at the title this year with a strong senior base and promising underclassmen.

Big Red Staff: Roundtable 18

Elijah Akhtarzad: A Healthy Balance 20

Mila Barzdukas: Football Injuries 22

Audrey Wilson: Flip Throw-In 24

Patrick Ryan: Gary Bairos 26

2 • BIG RED WINTER 2013-14

BIG REDJanuary 2014 • VOLUME 9 • NO.2

The Big Red Staff weighs in on the winter season, from players to coaches to memorable moments.

Although athletes like Anthony Ridgley ’15 are pressed with time surrounding school work, it is vital to recieve a sufficient amount of sleep and nutrition.

A look at the multiple injuries the varsity football team suffered during the 2013 season, which was considered the main factor in the team’s disappointing 4-6 season.

Girls soccer player Courtney Corrin ’16 demonstrates her ability to perform a front-flip on a soccer sideline throw-in to get more power behind the toss.

The varsity wrestling coach was raised by a family of hockey fans, so playing the sport was an obvious choice.

Derrick Newton has been struggling to stay healthy throughout his entire high school career, and will look to make a CIF run in his last season as a Wolverine.

PRINTED WITH PERMISSION OF THE MIAMI SUN SENTINEL CAITLIN NEAPOLE/BIG RED

GRANT NUSSBAUM/BIG RED

Sam Sachs: Athletes Face to Face 17Current Wolverine athletes and alumni like Jonathan Martin ’08 are impacted by the privileged surroundings at Harvard-Westlake.

The Bittersweet Science At the age of 11, Gabriel Preciado learned how to box in order to defend himself from gangs in Mexico.

popCULTURE

JAKE BRACKEN ’14Wrestling

NOAH GAINS ’15Boys’ Basketball

KATIE ZIPKIN-LEED ‘15Girls’ Basketball

Wolverine Athlete Favorite TV show?

Favorite Winter Olympic sport?

Beyoncé is...?

SNOWBOARDING “WALKING DEAD”

HOTCHARGERS

Super Bowl Favorite?

CURLING “WALKING DEAD”

THE GREATEST EVER

SAINTS

LUGE “FRIENDS”MY IDOLI DON’T KNOW

CHLOE CASTANEDA ’15Girls’ Soccer ICE SKATING “AMERICAN

HORROR STORY”

SO HOTSAINTS

BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014 • 3

As a young boy growing up in Mexico, Gabriel Preciado was sur-rounded by gangs.

“My part of town was kind of a rough place,” said Preciado, At-tendance Coordinator at the Upper School.

His father was a semi-pro boxer in Mexico, and the father and son en-joyed watching the fights.

“I started to get really into box-ing only because of my father, who was a natural. We watched boxing fights regularly, almost every week-end.”

“There was an event that hap-pened in my life where I got involved with some gangs where they roughed me up, you could say I was jumped,” Preciado said. “I was only 11 years old, so on my own accord I decided that I wanted to train so I didn’t have to live in fear.”

Preciado began working out with his father and on his own regularly in order to live without the constant dread of being picked on.

“I started boxing mainly to fight my stress of fear,” Preciado said. “Box-ing carried me through and made me confident. It gave me good discipline and gave me a good work out.”

Not only is Preciado grateful for self-confidence that came along with boxing, but he also enjoys the physi-cal benefits and uniqueness of the sport.

“I got into great shape because of boxing,” Preciado said. “It’s also really fun to watch. Two guys competing their hearts out and showing their skill. There is a special camaraderie

that exists between boxers, and that’s the beauty of it. When you go toe-to-toe with another man you have full respect for each other, and you don’t see that in most sports.”

Preciado and Alberto Rivera ’14 have started a boxing club at Har-vard-Westlake.

“Right now I just want to be available to students who are inter-ested in learning,” Preciado said. “I am just giving them basic fundamen-tals on hitting the punching bag and teaching them basic tactics. To me the most important thing is that we can enjoy boxing but also stay fit.”

Rivera says, “my main goal was to add another way that students can form bonds at Harvard-Westlake. Our passion for learning and getting together as a group definitely paid off considering I now have a place to learn about a sport. No matter how small a mark, I believe I left a nice memory in making the club, if not for Harvard-Westlake than at least for Mr. Preciado.”

Rivera believes that the enthusi-asm and commitment Preciado has toward the sport of boxing will draw people into the club.

“Mr. Preciado is great,” Rivera said. “Personally, I know he relates things in life to boxing and he builds upon us a great character. His eager-ness and excitement makes everyone else excited to learn and people will come back if they give him a chance.”

Rivera’s fascination with box-ing also started with his family, who began watching the sport in order to follow the career of Oscar de la

Hoya, who is from Los Angeles. Ri-vera began to watch many pay-per-view matches on TV, which led him to form a connection with Preciado over the sport they both love.

Jackson Beavers ’15 is another boxer at Harvard-Westlake. Beavers boxes with a trainer outside of school about once a week. Like Rivera and Preciado, Beavers wanted to be able to defend himself and prove to him-self that he had the willpower to at-tack such a demanding sport, but the biggest reason Beavers was attracted to boxing was the inspiration he re-ceived from the Rocky movies when he was in third grade.

“There was something about the amount of drive that movie showed a man could have that made me want to fight and make something of my-self,” Beavers said. “Boxing is a sport unlike any other in my opinion.”

Beavers, who also plays football for the Wolverines, believes that a special brotherhood exists in both boxing and football. Beavers started boxing at the Wildcard Boxing Club, which is now world famous in boxing circles for housing renowned trainer Freddy Roach and his protégé Manny Pacquiao.

“One of the things that has al-ways been special to me about box-ing is the community,” Beavers said. “If you find yourself in a real boxing gym, then you’re also going to find some of the most amazing charac-ters you’ll ever come across. It takes something special to drive some-one to pursue such an unbelievably straining sport as boxing. Everyone had a story, everyone had a reason to fight, and everyone had a mutual understanding of this that gave us all respect for one another.”

I GOT INVOLVED WITH SOME GANGS WHERE THEY ROUGHED ME UP, YOU COULD SAY I WAS JUMPED. I WAS ONLY 11 YEARS OLD, SO ON MY OWN ACCORD I DECIDED THAT I WANTED TO TRAIN SO I DIDN’T HAVE TO LIVE IN FEAR,” PRECIADO SAID.

NA

TH

AN

SON

’S

Sasha FierceChloe Castaneda ’15 eyes the ball in a non-league game against Oaks Chris-tian. The Wolverines won 2-0.

GRANT NUSSBAUM/BIG RED

BY TYLER GRAHAM

FLOAT LIKE A BUTTERFLY...

Photograph byGRANT NUSSBAUM

After dribbling past two defenders, guard Alex Copeland ’15 shoots a floating shot in the boys’ basketball team’s 64-52 win over St. Bernard Dec. 12.

SHOTS FIREDMidfielder

Mackenzie Howe ’14 watches as her shot skips past the Oaks Christian goalkeeper. Howe scored the team’s second goal in its 2-0 win Dec. 11.

Photograph byGRANT NUSSBAUM

Henry Quilici ’15 dribbles the ball past a Cathedral defender in the boys’ soccer team’s 2-1 win Dec. 12. The squad begins its Mission League season against Crespi Jan. 8 at Ted Slavin Field.

FENDING OFFDEFENDERS

Photograph byELIJAH

AKHTARZAD

don’t call it a COMEBACK

10 • BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014

BY GRANT NUSSBAUM

Robbed of his entire freshman season and the core of his junior season by shoulder injuries, boys’ basketball forward Derick Newton ’14 vows to make the most of his final year in the

Wolverine uniform.

BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014 • 11

Reading 1.8 seconds re-maining in regulation off the game clock with the boys’ varsity basketball

team down 59-57 to Palisades on Dec. 4, Derick Newton ’14 shuf-fled into position in front of the opposing basket and prepared to run the play “home run” to tie or win the game.

After teammate Bryan Po-lan ’14 launched a pinpoint pass from the Wolverines’ own base-line, spanning three-fourths the length of the court, Newton ma-neuvered himself to the top of the key, towered above two Palisades defenders to secure the ball, and turned to the rim, stepping into a wide open paint.

All that remained was the fin-ish, and with a flex of his surgical-ly-repaired right shoulder, New-ton rose up and escorted the ball softly into the hoop. The senior’s lay-in beat the buzzer and sent the game to overtime, where the Wolverines would close out their first game of the season to earn a 70-66 victory.

“Let me show them what Derick Newton is going to be like this year, and what Harvard-Westlake is going to be like this year. That was my goal for the first game,” Newton said.

Ten months earlier, the for-ward found himself in an all-too-familiar position: on the bench, watching helplessly as he recov-ered from an injury to that war-torn right shoulder. Now, after kicking off his senior year with a bang, Newton hopes to close the chapter on his haunting shoulder wounds and make the most of his final year in red and black.

“When you look at it liter-ally, he’s been here three years and only played one, his sopho-more year,” basketball head coach Greg Hilliard said in the Novem-ber issue of the Chronicle. “He played no games his freshman year, played a full season sopho-more year, and last year missed17 games. So, he’s trying to make up

for lost times.”Having missed more than a

season and a half out of three sea-sons, Newton proceeds through the early stages of his last year with a chip on his shoulder.

“I feel like I have a lot to prove this year,” Newton said. “I have to prove that I can stay healthy. I have to prove that I’m not just a guy who just puts up numbers and can’t win. I want to prove that I can put up num-bers and carry a team, and win some games. I haven’t won Mis-sion League since I’ve been here, I haven’t been past the third round of the playoffs since I’ve been here, so I just want to win league and get past the third round – at least show some type of improve-ment for my last year.”

Newton joined the varsity team his freshman year in 2010-2011, but his first season ended before it began. Newton elected to have surgery on his right shoulder, as the forward’s shoul-der troubled him often prior to his freshman year.

Newton suffered a torn la-brum after dislocating his shoul-der, which, according to the Palo Alto Medical Foundation, would him prone to reoccurring dislo-cations.

“In eighth grade, my shoul-der would just constantly slip out,” Newton said. “It would slip out of its socket and dislocate, and I’d constantly have to sit out two weeks at a time. I could’ve not gotten the surgery and played my freshman year, but my shoul-der probably would’ve dislocated three times in that year, so I de-cided to have the surgery and never have to deal with it again.”

The 2010-2011 season pro-vided a bittersweet finish for Newton. The basketball team, led by Damiene Cain ’11, Zena Edo-somwan ’12, Josh Hearlihy ’12 and Michael Sheng ’14, battled to win its first CIF Championship in six years, all the while Newton watched from the sideline.

GRANT NUSSBAUM/BIG RED

by the nuMbers

DON’T CALL IT A COMEBACK

18.6newton’s career Points Per GaMe

10twenty-Plus Point GaMes last season

17GaMes Missed

due to inJury his Junior year

LETTING IT FLYBoys’ basketball forward Derick Newton ’14 takes a mid-range shot against Redondo in his junior season.

Following his year quaran-tined to the sidelines, Newton did not miss a beat stepping back onto the court as a sophomore, playing 29 games and emerging as the team’s leading scorer with 17.1 points per game in 2011-2012. The team, however, was eliminated in the third round of CIF playoffs by Serra.

At the beginning of his junior year, Newton picked up where he left off, once again leading the Wolverines in scoring by the end of 2012. But the forward suffered another setback Jan. 9, 2012, when old demons reappeared and Newton reinjured his shoul-der against Chaminade.

“I had a healthy sophomore year, though we didn’t do much in playoffs,” Newton said. “Ju-nior year – that was just a freak

accident. I’m tangled up with [Chaminade forward] Jack Wil-liams, and he’s a very emotional player. I’m walking the other way with our arms still tangled, and he yanks my arm.”

Newton’s incident with Wil-liams devastated the forward, ultimately costing him 17 of the Wolverines’ 29 games in 2012-2013, including most of league play as well as the team’s first playoff game.

“The injury was really sur-prising because I didn’t have a single problem with my shoul-der,” Newton said. “I thought I was completely healthy, and I didn’t think I would ever have to deal with problems to that shoulder again. But it was really depressing, because I put in a lot of work to come back, and I had a

great start. I put up big numbers, I help my team upset the number seven team in the country, and suffering that injury really hurt me.”

Given the history with his right shoulder, Newton initially feared the long-term implica-tions of the mishap against Chaminade.

“When I first heard about my injury, I was scared,” Newton said. “I thought, ‘Did I re-tear my labrum? Was the surgery unsuc-cessful?’”

Newton’s fears were allayed, however, after further diagnosis.

“When I went to the doctor, he said that I had just tweaked it, and that it was just a freak ac-cident,” Newton said. “He said that it could have happened to anyone, even someone with a healthy shoulder. To me, that was a really positive evaluation of my shoulder.”

One month and eight days passed with Newton once again relegated to the bench.

The forward made his return to the Wolverine lineup for the second round of CIF Playoffs against Laguna Beach Feb. 15, scoring 21 points in the Wolver-ines’ 73-60 win.

“I was pretty mad at [trainer] Milo [Sini] and the doctor for keeping me out that long, be-cause I thought I was ready in within a week or two, like I would be in eighth grade,” Newton said. “But I appreciate it now, because now I have no problems with it. I feel like, what if I came back early – a week after getting hurt – and it slipped out again? I would’ve had to have surgery again, and I wouldn’t be playing this year.”

Despite Newton’s strong scor-ing performance in his first game back, however, the basketball team was once again bounced in the third round of CIF playoffs the following game, at the hands of Bishop Montgomery.

Returning to the Wolverines one final time off last year’s Bish-op Montgomery loss, Newton believes overcoming his damaged

past will fuel his renewed present.“This whole thing has defi-

nitely provided me some motiva-tion, because I want to win CIF,” Newton said. “Freshman year is the only time I won CIF, but I didn’t play. Sophomore year we probably had the most talented team, with Zena and Josh and me, but we lost in the third round of the playoffs. And then my ju-nior year, we have a great record, but then I get hurt, we go 6-6 in league, and when I come back, we’re playing the number one team in the nation at that point, my second game back.”

While the forward missed a few games this season with a mi-nor ankle injury, Newton never-theless feels primed and ready to give his best in 2014.

“I think this season, health-wise, I feel it’s probably the best shape I’ve ever been in,” Newton said. “I’m as strong as I’ve ever been, I’m as healthy as I’ve been in a while.”

“I kind of adapted to having a bad shoulder in a way, though now it’s healthy,” Newton added. “I always feel comfortable with my shoulder, I’m not afraid for

12 • BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014JACK GOLDFISHER/BIG RED

“THIS YEAR, I’M AS STRONG AS I’VE EVER BEEN,

AND I’M AS HEALTHY AS I’VE BEEN IN A WHILE.”

it to slip out. And that’s when a lot of people who get injured get scared. They don’t come back the same because they’re afraid to injure it again. It got to a point where I wasn’t afraid to injure it again, because I knew I was going to come back in two weeks and play the same.”

Although he has missed sig-nificant time on the court, New-ton reflects fondly on his time in a Wolverine uniform and feels eager to act as a veteran leader for the team in his last year.

“Before, I never really under-stood what Coach Hilliard meant when said that most of his play-ers don’t really ‘get it’ until their senior year, or that something ‘clicks’ their senior year,” New-ton said. “Sophomore and junior year, to be honest, all I cared about was, ‘am I putting up big numbers?’ But now, I don’t care if I scored 26 points in a game that we lost – I’m just angry that we lost. I take the game a lot more seriously this year as far as win-ning is concerned. And it’s click-

ing. As Coach Hilliard said, it clicked.”

“I’m feeling very confident about this year,” Newton said. “I’m going to miss it. Playing Palisades was my last first game of the year. This was the last time I went to Palm Springs for the holiday tournament. I’m go-ing to really miss playing here at Harvard-Westlake, at this school. So I’m ready to see how the sea-son goes, and I’m ready to give it my all.”

I FEEL I HAVE A LOT TO PROVE. I HAVE TO PROVE THAT I CAN STAY HEALTHY. THAT I’M NOT JUST A GUY WHO JUST PUTS UP NUMBERS AND CAN’T WIN. I WANT TO PROVE THAT I CAN PUT UP NUMBERS AND CARRY A TEAM, AND WIN SOME GAMES.” NEWTON SAID.

BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014 • 13

JACK GOLDFISHER/BIG RED

THE FINAL STEPFor the past three seasons, the girls’ varsity soccer team has faced high expectations, having been named one of the best teams in the nation last year. But in that time, the Wolverines have yet to clinch any CIF gold. In their last season, the team’s seniors aim to go out on top and finally

clutch the CIF plaque.

BY ERIC LOEB

Any member of the girls’ soccer team would tell you that last season’s CIF Semifinals loss

to Chaminade in penalty kicks left her with a sour taste in her mouth. The team was 20-2-3 entering the game, had lost only one league game all season, and expected not only to defeat the Eagles, but win the CIF Cham-pionship, regardless of who got in their way. But that’s not how it played out.

Now seniors, McKynzie Dickman ’14 and Malanna Wheat ’14 have something to prove. Al-though both have already com-mitted to colleges to continue their soccer careers, Dickman to Creighton and Wheat to SMU, both have one goal they have to achieve at the high school level, winning a CIF Championship.

There is no argument that the teams Head Coach Richard Simms has put on the field have consistently been some of the most talented in California. That has not been the issue for the pro-gram.

“In past years, each player has been very good and talented as individuals,” Dickman said. “But we didn’t seem to work well as a team. I felt like it was a couple players wanting to do it all them-selves.”

Wheat echoed the idea of a young team lacking experience, but felt that some of the individual egos on the team have been the cause for its demise in the playoffs.

“The girls’ soccer program at this school has always been a strong one,” Wheat said. “A pro-gram that deserves to play for and compete in a Division I league.

The players that have come through this program are some of the best in southern California and this is what has prevented us from winning. With such a large pool of talented players, when we lose sight of the team goal, we then rely on our individual tal-ent. Furthermore, with excessive amounts of talent comes arro-gance. We’ve won the Mater Dei tournament, we’ve been league champions, we rarely lose, and in the final game we can’t perform. We freeze up, we underestimate our opponent, and we think that we deserve to win just because we’re good. That’s the problem.”

As Dickman alluded to, this years team is much more expe-rienced than that of years past. Six other seniors stand alongside Dickman and Wheat, along with a core of young players that are not only ready to continue the program’s successes into the fu-ture, but are ready to win now. One senior specifically plays a big role in the team’s increase in on-the-field leadership.

Dickman has already played three years on varsity, but has had trouble staying healthy. Prior to the start of her sophomore sea-son, she badly sprained her MCL, and said she fought off pain throughout the year. Last season, she had hip surgery, and missed the entire year. This year, players hope that her on-the-field leader-ship will help in clutch, late game situations like they faced last sea-son against Chaminade.

Prior to the start of this sea-son, players say the team has in-vested practice time in different ways they had not in years past. Because of the team’s immense talent and the fact that most of

the players play for club teams during the offseason, the team’s coaching staff has decided that investing time in regular work-outs is not the best use of its al-ready limited practice time.

“We haven’t done any extra physical work in terms of skill and ability,” Wheat said. “Instead,

we›re focusing on the morale and chemistry of the team. We are working towards encouraging the younger players and providing an environment for them where they aren’t scared of authority or upperclassmen because at the end of the day we need them. We are so lucky and thankful to

14 • BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014

GRANT NUSSBAUM/BIG RED

FIELD GENERALDefender Malanna Wheat ’14 runs up the pitch as Midfielder McKynzie Dickman ’14 surveys the field for a pass against Oaks Christian Dec. 11.

IN PAST YEARS, EACH PLAYER HAS BEEN VERY GOOD AND TALENTED AS INDIVIDUALS. BUT WE DIDN’T SEEM TO WORK WELL AS A TEAM. I FELT LIKE IT WAS A COUPLE PLAYERS WANTING TO DO IT ALL THEMSELVES.” DICKMAN SAID.

“BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014 • 15

THE FINAL STEP

get the chance to play with and experience their greatness, so it’s only fair that we encourage them to self-sacrifice, create plays, par-ticipate and add to this team›s success.”

Dickman says that these workouts have done their job in helping the team come together for a common goal.

   “We are much more a team than my past three years on varsity,” she said. “We all trust each other and support each other rather than just blaming and pointing fingers at each other.”

Although Wheat believes in the team has a shot at winning CIF, she is hesitant to guarantee a championship.

At the end of the day, I really do believe this team has the ability to take it all the way,” she said. “But then again I’ve felt this way in years past, only to get my hopes up and then crushed. It’s an odd feeling. Trying to balance being confident and having faith in your teammates but at the same time, refraining from getting cocky and letting victory get to your head. I guess we just have to keep everything in perspective, that’s the main goal for us this year.”

Dickman agreed with Wheat’s points, was more opti-mistic on her team’s chances of winning CIF this season.

“We have been working on just working hard and keeping consistent with our effort,” the midfielder said. “We have been taking everything we do just one step at a time. We support each other constantly and I think we have developed a better team chemistry than last year. We have a very talented team this year and I believe we have a great chance of winning a CIF championship.”

Despite all of the work the team has done to prepare for this season, and all of the agonies of defeat the team has faced in the in the past few seasons, players say that if they were to accomplish what they describe as their final goal, the only one they have failed to achieve in the past, they would not be satisfied.

This is the seniors’ last shot, and they plan to refuse to let any-thing slip away from their grasps.  

“If we win, there will be lots of tears and smiles, hugs and screams,” Wheat said. “It would be very rewarding, but I think instead of excessive celebration we would focus on the next task which would be state.”

SENIORITISMackenzie Howe ’14, top left, Malanna Wheat ’14, top right, and Mikaela Hong ’14, bottom right, are three of eight girls’ varsity soccer seniors hoping to finally come away with a CIF title in their final season.

16 • BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014

GRANT NUSSBAUM/BIG RED

GRANT NUSSBAUM/BIG RED

JACK GOLDFISHER/BIG RED

The Privileged Player

BY SAM SACHS

Jonathan Martin ’08 walked out of the Miami Dolphins practice facility on Oct. 28 after a cafeteria prank.  Martin has not returned to the team and was

placed on the non-football illness list on Nov. 30.Martin, who graduated from Stanford with

a degree in classics, was at the center of bullying scandal that dominated national news cycles for weeks.   Here at Harvard-Westlake the scandal was discussed around campus and, more for-mally, in some Civitalks groups.

Inside the locker rooms underneath Taper Gym the controversy surrounding Martin has brought out the opinions of many Harvard-Westlake athletes.   The “Boys’ Club” that pro-fessional sports have always been has fostered a tough guy way of thinking and acting in locker rooms, specifically those of men’s sports, and Martin apparently didn’t fit in, and it’s hard to argue his background wasn’t a part of the reason why.

“Jonathan Martin represents all of us as sensitive intellectuals in today’s society, and in some professions like the NFL, there aren’t many of us,” Black Leadership Awareness and Culture Club leader and varsity basketball player Miles Williams ’14 said.  “The sad thing is, he becomes an outsider for being intelligent when he should be embraced... He is fragile yet powerful as his mind speaks louder than his actions.”

Martin was the victim of racial slurs and bullying that three sport athlete (football, wres-tling and lacrosse) Ben Klein ’14 characterized as out-of-line and unlike anything that happens here at Harvard-Westlake.   However, despite the bullying, teammates didn’t throw their sup-port behind the second-year player out of Stan-ford.  Instead some players came to the defense of Richie Incognito, the alleged perpetrator of Martin’s bullying.

One anonymous player who left the Dol-phins this past summer took it so far to say

“Richie is honorary.  I don’t expect you to under-stand because you’re not black. But being a black guy, being a brother is more than just about skin color. It’s about how you carry yourself. How you play. Where you come from. What you’ve expe-rienced. A lot of things.”

Presumably, this player is referring to Incog-nito’s tough background compared to Martin’s privileged upbringing, both of his parents are lawyers, and his Harvard-Westlake and Stanford education, not to mention that 12 of his relaives are Harvard College graduates.

“If you want to look at Richie Incognito and say the way he lives, and talks, and walks  and does his thing makes him honorary black, that’s

fine, you can do what you want,” Upper School Dean and Assistant Basketball Coach Chris Jones said. “But to look at Jonathan Martin and say that because his walk through life is different than most people’s who are black then somehow or other he’s less black, I can’t buy that. Because there is no singular black experience, like it re-ally is fairly diversified.”

Jones grew up on the infamous South Side of Chicago and played basketball at his local YMCA, but attended a private Christian high school with a privileged student body before playing basketball at Williams College.

“With the kids that I grew up with, there is a hunger there that isn’t the same as it is in a more privileged environment,” Jones said.

“I definitely think his upbringing made him react the way he did,” Klein said.  “When you’re brought up like we are, where we are told to resolve conflicts diplomatically instead of vio-lently, it is going to translate to your life beyond Harvard-Westlake.”

In most cases one would consider this kind of peaceful resolution as a positive, but is there room for this type of thinking in the machismo and testosterone filled NFL locker room?

“I think that we as viewers enable the NFL to become like a gladiatorial arena, and with that comes a cruel and cold culture,” varsity baseball player Michael Vokulich ’14 said. “It’s sad that Jonathan Martin was subjected to bullying but the said truth is that if he isn’t willing to deal with it then somebody else will.”

Here, at Harvard-Westlake, we live in a bub-ble.   Our campus is populated by kids mostly from wealthy and well-educated families.  This type of environment that we are so proud of is not conducive to developing a natural edge or mean streak that so many NFL teams covet.

“I have to believe that a guy who has been playing to put bread on the table is going to put up with more bullying than a guy who can walk away and still eat,” Vokulich said.

BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014 • 17

Jonathan Martin ’08 is just the most recent Harvard-Westlake athlete to be in the news. Does the environment here affect the way our athletes behave once they leave campus?

“The sad thing is, he becomes an outsider

for being intelligent when he should be

embraced”-Miles Williams ‘14

wolverineroundtable

Q: Which winter team do you see going farthest in CIF playoffs this year?

Members of the Big Red staff give their take on key issues in current Wolverine sports.

Q:Who is the most valuable player of the winter season so far?

Sachs: As a member of the boys’ basketball team I am obviously biased, but that being said I think the Wolverines boys’ basketball team has a good shot to make a deep run in CIF. The team just came off a national invitational tournament where they finished 3-2 without starter Derick Newton ’14, which included a 53-44 loss to eventual tournament champions Jackson High School (Mill Creek, WA). Newton is set to return in time for league play. Despite not being ranked as highly as Mission League teams like Loyola and Alemany, I think we have the chance to surprise other teams in the league. Bryan Polan ’14, Michael Sheng ’14 and all-tournament selection Alex Copeland ’15 also set up the Wolver-ines well to make an excellent run through league play and into CIF playoffs.

Barzdukas: Flacks has already led one team to a CIF Cham-pionship this year, and now he has the potential to do it with another. He led the boys’ water polo team to their first league championship in five years and their first CIF championship ever. His team is ranked number one in the nation, and Flacks was named CIF Southern Section coach of the year. His work with the boys’ water polo team is so tremendous, it’s crazy to realize that he also has the promising girls’ water polo team to coach this season.

Q: Halfway through the year, who is your early choice for coach of the year?

HUDDLE UP Brian Flacks ’06 rallies the boys’ water polo team in a time out against Agoura Nov. 9. The team won a CIF title this sea-son for the first time in program history.

CAITLIN NEAPOLE/BIG RED

18 • BIG RED WINTER 2013

Barzdukas: Despite being only a sophomore, Lindsey Tse ’16 is my choice for MVP. After being an impact player last year, she is now consistently one of the top scorers for the girls’ basketball team. Her efforts including 16 points in a 52-48 victory over Clo-vis North and a whopping 33 points over Burrows in a preseason tournament.

LIKE MIKEPoint Guard Michael Sheng ’14 dribbles the ball down the court in the University Tour-nament against St. Bernard Dec. 13. Sheng led the team to a 71-62 win.

GRANT NUSSBAUM/BIG RED

Putnam: I would say that for the winter season there cannot be just one MVP. Instead, the award must go to Michael Sheng ’14 and Alex Copeland ’15. These two players are the foundation of this year’s Wolverine basketball team. Sheng’s ball handling couples with his innate ability to playmake ensures he is a strong force this year. A fourth-year starter, his experience will lead the team. In addition, the Wolverines would be struggling without Copeland’s reliable shooting and spectacular drives.

Wilson: With his team’s impressive standings during his Har-vard-Westlake career, girls’ soccer coach Richard Simms gets my vote for coach of the year so far. When Simms first joined the pro-gram, he led the team from being unranked to being ranked 17th in the nation after making it to CIF Finals in 2006. Since then, Simms has maintained this high standard of play and the team has been consistently going far in Division I. Simms has coached many of the country’s most talented players who have continued to play soccer at the college level. Despite this, Simms has never walked away with ring. His hard work and this year’s talented, deep team can make this year the year for his CIF championship.

Nussbaum: The entire soccer team is composed of MVPs, but I think Courtney O’Brien ’15 stands out. O’Brien brings her speed and goal scoring to the team. The Princeton commit is the top goal scorer on the team, and she will be the team’s go-to in tough situations.

Putnam: Erin Creznic rebounded from the loss of most of her players to graduation last year to put together a CIF winning team. Consistency has always been the key to Creznic’s success as a coach, and I think her steady lead was the reason we won. She is a great coach, and now she has a ring to prove it.

GOLAZOForward Courtney O’Brien’ 15 evades an Oaks Christian de-fender in a non-league game. The team recently won the Mater Dei Invitational for the second year in a row.

GRANT NUSSBAUM/BIG RED

Q: What was the biggest storyline of 2013 in Wolverine sports?

Grant NussbaumEditor-in-Chief

Eric LoebManaging Editor

Mila BarzdukasAssociate Editor

Sachs: The biggest storylines of 2013 have to be the success of our baseball and boys’ water polo teams as both were able to cap-ture CIF titles. On their way to being named the best team in the country the baseball team outscored their CIF opponents 28-4 fu-eled by the dominating arms of Conor Cuse ’13 and Jack Flaherty ’14. The boys’ water polo team was not quite as dominant but was able to beat powerhouse Mater Dei 9-6 in the CIF championship game, avenging an 11-8 loss to the Monarchs earlier in the season.

Audrey WilsonAssociate Editor

Sam SachsManaging Editor

Lucy PutnamManaging Editor

PHOTOS BY LIZZY THOMAS/BIG RED

BIG RED WINTER 2013 • 19

Wilson: I think that girls’ water polo will go furthest in CIF this year. With CIF championships in 2011 and 2012 and head coach Brian Flacks ’06, who led the boys’ team to a CIF victory already this year, the girls are in a very good position for success. Though it will be a challenge with only two seniors on the team, Sydney Cheong ’14 and Rebecca Armstrong ’14, I think they can help take their younger teammates far in CIF playoffs.

Loeb: I think the girls’ soccer team will finally achieve their goal of winning a CIF Championship this season. After last year’s disappointing semifinal loss to Chaminade, the team’s seniors are determined and refocused, and with the emergence of young talent like Courtney O’Brien ’15, the team appears to be destined to win it all. Loeb: After being defeated in CIF finals last year, the girls’ field

hockey team’s championship season this year was well earned. After the team’s more experienced players suffered an overtime loss last season, watching them finally get their ring they deserved was great to see.

Nussbaum: 2013 saw not one but two former Harvard-West-lake athletes make national headlines and bring issues to light on the stage of professional sports: Jason Collins ’97 after becoming the first active professional male athlete to come out as gay, and Jonathan Martin ’08 after leaving his Miami Dolphins team, alleg-ing that his teammates bullied him. With the nationwide buzz and impact created by these two alumni, they certainly should be at the top of the “biggest storyline” list. Collins and Martin have both brought awareness and helped move the professional sports scene toward becoming a less hostile, more welcoming environment, and have represented Harvard-Westlake in doing so.

A fter his intense water polo practice ends at 6 p.m., Antho-ny Ridgley ’15 rushes straight home only to be met by the

homework he has to do before the next day. Too tired to work after a combined five hours of lifting and practice, Ridg-ley goes to bed after an hour and a half of working, only to wake up the next morning to go through the same rou-tine again.

“During season I pretty much try to do only the most important work, the things that actually get turned in, and can only get through about an hour and a half of work once I get home,” Ridg-ley said. “I felt like I was getting a good amount of sleep because I would just go to bed whenever I felt tired. My position was that if I was too tired I would just have a bad day and then a bad practice.”

However, unlike Ridgley, varsity girls’ basketball team guard Teeana Cotangco ’15 forfeits valuable hours of sleep in order to complete her home-work each night.

“If I stay up late it’s usually until like one or two, and if I get to bed early I usually knock out at like nine and wake up at four or five,” Cotangco said.

With the rigorous work load Har-vard-Westlake have, student-athletes are pressed to finish all their work that is due the following day. In a recent study by Stanford professor Cherri D. Mah, Mah concluded that athletes are more readily able to reach their optimal per-formance and sprint times, if they are able to get a sufficient amount of sleep the night before. Mah also determined that athletes who get ten or more hours of sleep each night, are able to function at a higher level the next day and with a better overall attitude. Mah tested her experiment of sleep on the 2009 Stan-ford men’s basketball team, which in-cluded Toronto Raptors small forward Landry Fields, who was drafted by the New York Knicks in 2010.

Due to tournaments nearly every weekend and games almost twice a week while in season, varsity athletes like Co-

tangco are ultimately fatigued after re-ceiving a minimal amount of sleep the prior night. Cotangco’s lack of sleep and frequent practices has contributed in the development of her knee tendonitis.

“Especially with all the tournaments and games I usually get home later and decide to sleep early and wake up early to finish work, or stay up late and have a rough day the next day,” Cotangco said. “I guess overall during season I’m pretty tired, mentally and physically and I have to adjust my schedule to get enough hours to feel all right the next day.”

On a normal day of training and practice in season, Ridgley spends near-ly the same amount of time practicing and training for water polo as he does in classes. With lifting in the morning, watching game video before practice, and then spending three hours in the pool with his teammates, Ridgley is able to stay healthy during the season by put-ting his health ahead of his schoolwork.

Cotangco has been on the varsity girls’ basketball since the start of high school, and has been a major factor in the program’s success. Although she doesn’t lift in the morning like Ridgley and the water polo team, after her prac-tices that end at 5 p.m., she is directed towards the weight room where her whole team must lift for 45 minutes. Af-ter both practice and lifting, Cotangco’s body takes such a high toll that she must stay at school for another 30 minutes to ice her body and knees.

“After school on regular practice days I have practice from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. and then lifting right after,” Co-tangco said. “Then I see the trainers and ice my body because I have knee ten-donitis. I would say after practice and lifting I usually am pretty exhausted and sleep on the bus on the way home and I then have to decide whether to stay up and do homework or go to bed and wake up early the next morning.”

While Ridgley gets enough sleep at the expense of his school work, he also must focus on his nutrition to maintain his high performance in practices and

games. The water polo team recently de-feated Mater Dei in the CIF Finals 9-6 to be subsequently named the number one team in the nation, and Ridgley was later placed on the All CIF Division I third team. Ridgley has been drinking milk with almost every meal since he was in middle school in efforts to main-tain a healthy diet.

“I definitely felt like I ate healthier during the season,” Ridgley said. “Our coach doesn’t give us restrictions on what to eat or anything like that, but he recommends that we eat healthy. I’m a goalie so I don’t need to get really bulked up, but some other players eat anything they can and want to weigh more dur-ing season to sustain their body mass. I don’t eat anything too specific, but I have protein shakes after all our lifts and just try and eat as healthy as I can with what they have in the cafeteria, which usually isn’t too good. I would always go for rice, chicken breast, and whatever vegetables they had that day. That was pretty much my lunch every day during the season.”

Although boys’ water polo coach Brian Flacks and varsity girls’ basket-ball team head coach Melisa Hearlihy do not restrict their players’ diets, the food athletes eat during the season can greatly influence their performance on the court according to Mah.

The girls’ varsity volleyball team, which has placed first in the Mission League the last two seasons, invited Kristen Bell, a health professional to speak to the team regarding the benefits of eating healthy during season play. Al-though the squad didn’t have any spe-cific diet they had to follow, some play-ers decided to take diet into their own hands to help their performance during the season.

“Kristen was really nice, and she showed us several healthy options for food during the season that would make us more energetic for practice and games,” Rachel Savage ’15 said. “She taught us a lot without getting too sci-entific.”

BY ELIJAH AKHTARZAD

Healthy Balance

20 • BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014

BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014 • 21

AFTER PRACTICE AND LIFTING I USUALLY AM PRETTY EXHAUSTED AND SLEEP ON THE BUS ON THE WAY HOME AND I THEN HAVE TO DECIDE WHETHER TO STAY UP AND DO HOMEWORK OR GO TO BED AND WAKE UP EARLY THE NEXT MORNING,” COTANGCO SAID.

THE ONLY THING NEGATIVELY AFFECTED DURING THE SEASON WAS MY ABILITY TO COMPLETE ALL OF MY WORK,” RIDGLEY SAID.

KRISTEN WAS RE-ALLY NICE, AND SHE SHOWED US SEVERAL HEALTHY OPTIONS FOR FOOD DURING THE SEASON THAT WOULD MAKE US MORE ENER-GETIC FOR PRACTICE AND GAMES,” RACHEL SAVAGE ’15 SAID. “SHE TAUGHT US A LOT WITHOUT GETTING TOO SCIENTIFIC.”

I GUESS OVERALL DURING SEASON I’M PRETTY TIRED, MENTALLY AND PHYSICALLY AND I HAVE TO ADJUST MY SCHEDULE TO GET ENOUGH HOURS TO FEEL ALL RIGHT THE NEXT DAY,” COTANGCO SAID.

““ “

The football team suffered from numerous injuries to star players

this season, diminishing its 4-0 start with six straight losses.

The Injury Report

During the second play of the football team’s homecoming game against Palisades Charter High School, running back Garrett Robinson ’15 was running down the field when he heard a pop after his left ankle bent into an unnatural position. He tried to walk it off, but the pain per-sisted. He consulted the trainers, tested his ankle by jogging on the sideline, and realized that he would be unable to finish the game. He was di-agnosed with a high ankle sprain.

Two games later, quarterback Marshal Co-hen ’16 was running the ball down the field. A St. Paul player tackled him, and Cohen tore his left ACL, ending his season.

“I got injured trying to do a triple spin hur-dle flip over the defender,” Cohen said.

One game later, Desmond Butler ’15 tackled a St. Francis fullback in the fourth quarter. The fullback fell on Butler’s knee in an awkward way, and Butler was diagnosed with a sprained MCL.

Injuries are common to the sport of foot-ball. The huddle of medical personnel around a fallen player is seemingly part of every game at every level of play. The fast pace and high im-pact of the sport contributes to almost 350,000 football-related injuries a year. The most com-mon injuries are sprains, followed by fractures and dislocations. Science Daily estimates that football-related concussions account for about 8,631 injuries a year. During football season, an average of 57 players a day are sent to emergency rooms across the United States for football-relat-ed concussions. The Center of Disease Control and Prevention said in a 2006 study that there is a 12.09 percent chance of a football player get-ting injured in competition.

The varsity team started the year 4-0, but as the season wore on, injuries to key players took a toll on the team. The at-first promising playoff contenders finished 0-5 in league and 4-6 for the season. An administrative decision was made to not apply for a playoff bid. The team’s injury situation, and the probability of a difficult play-off draw on-the-road factored into the decision to not apply for a playoff berth

“I think injuries did play a big part of it,” Head of Athletics Terry Barnum said. “We are not a deep team and so when we lose starters, replacing them is more difficult, and so I think

that played a role in it. We had some injuries to some key members of our team and we were un-able to replicate the production that they were giving us.”

Barnum believes the large number of inju-ries this year was an anomaly.

“I’ve seen 10 football seasons here, and in 10 seasons this might have been the worst or sec-ond worst in terms of injuries,” Barnum. “That’s gonna happen. It’s not the fault of the coaches, its not the fault of the kids, its definitely not the fault of sports medicine. It happens. You just have years where you’re snakebitten with inju-ries, and I think that’s what happened this year.”

Head Coach Scot Ruggles also said the in-jury numbers were greater compared to previ-ous years.

“It was a very weird year with injuries, more than any year in my time coaching,” Ruggles said.

Barnum said the athletic department is in-vestigating possible causes for the large number of injuries on the team.

“We would be irresponsible if we didn’t look at it and try to do what we could do to make it better,” Barnum said. “We are going to look at our offseason training regimen and make sure that our guys are in tip-top shape and ready to compete.”

Barnum also believes players playing of-fense and defense could be a factor.

“You tend to get injured when you are tired, and if we can have guys be less tired, that means looking at kids that go both ways,” Barnum said. “We obviously will have to have kids go both ways, but we want to do it only in places where we can afford to do that. We’re also looking at nutrition and sleep. We’re going to be purpose-ful in making sure we address those things.”

Barnum also cited the toughness of the Mis-sion League as a factor contributing to the team’s slide over the course of the season.

“Our competition got better,” Barnum said. “We were playing teams in league that were better than the teams we played before league. When your competition gets better and you’re a depleted team from an injury standpoint, that’s going to make it more difficult to win.”

This year, fellow Mission League teams St.

Francis, Chaminade, and Serra made the CIF Southern Section semifinals. Chaminade won the CIF title over Serra with a last minute tie-breaking field goal. They then went on to win the State Division II final in a blowout victory.

According to the National Institutes of Health, football is the most popular boys’ sport in the United States, with 1.1 million athletes playing annually. At Harvard-Westlake, how-ever, football is less popular. This year, only 37 high schoolers were on the varsity team, over 20 players fewer on the next smallest roster in the Mission League.

“Injuries pretty much destroyed our team because we don’t have a lot of players,” Cohen said. “When we lost Garrett we lost our running game which we had based our entire season on.”

Several players believe the football season would have been more successful if the team were larger.

“If we had more numbers, we would have a backup who would be devoted to only that position,” wide receiver Noah Pompan ‘14 said. “When Marshal went down, if we had more numbers we would have had a true quarterback who would have done those drills all summer. We had to put in Ryan Dominic ’17, a freshman, into the quarterback position and we struggled.”

“Guys just have to come out and play,” Co-hen added. “I think some people don’t under-stand that if they come out, they will make a dif-ference. First time players can come out and play and still be effective.”

However, there is still a stigma attached to football that prevents people from trying the sport.

“My dad wouldn’t let me play,” Cole Fletcher ’15 said. “He didn’t want me to get hurt and then not be able to play my main sport, soccer.”

“The nature of Harvard-Westlake is we’re just not a football school,” Pompan said. “At other schools kids have been playing since they were little and they need football to go college. We are in such a fortunate situation where we can get into schools based off of academic merit.”

Pompan has had an unusual football ca-reer at Harvard-Westlake. He played football in eighth and ninth grade before quitting the sport once he reached the upper school. Pompan de-

BY MILA BARZDUKAS

22 • BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014

Hassan smitH ’15 suffered a leg injury against sylmar sept. 20.

cided to play lacrosse in college, devoting his sophomore and junior years to the sport. He came back to the football team for his senior season.

“I joined because I had gotten my college looks for lacrosse and I just thought it would be fun to come back,” Pompan said. Pompan will be playing lacrosse at Gettysburg College in Pennsylvania next year.

Pompan suffered a concussion this year against Sylmar. He did not miss any games, and he still loves the sport.

“There’re so many kids around Harvard-Westlake that have the size and athleticism to play football, but it’s just not a part of their cul-ture,” Pompan said. “There are so many things telling them not to play football, but they don’t

see the advantages. I came back this year and I had a great time.”

In the age of the single-sport athlete, the time demands of specialization have forced student-athletes to choose only one sport they want to play. Many believe that they can not play in college unless they focus only on one sport. Ruggles still welcomes multisport ath-letes.

“Most of our kids play other sports,” Ruggles says. “Football is a very tough game, that should not be played year round. I like the fact our kids compete in other things and are coached by other people, not just in sports. Many of our kids are involved in the arts, which I think is great. My advice is to be well-rounded.”

Despite the injury situation and lack of depth to the team, Barnum draws positive things from the season.

“I think that we made some progress, and I think a lot of our young kids stepped up and played really well, which prepares our team for next year,” Barnum said.

Robinson missed four consecutive league games before he was cleared to play in the last game of the season against Cathedral. He rein-jured his ankle in the second half of the game when an opposing linebacker’s helmet hit his ankle during a tackle. He is resting and work-ing to make a full recovery before he begins his track season. Cohen had surgery on his ACL on Dec. 23, and is rehabbing it to get back to the field as soon as possible.

BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014 • 23

JACK GOLDFISHER/BIG RED

= 57

= 58

= 10 Players

= 62

= 37

Outmanned

Serra

St. Paul

Chaminade

St. Francis

Harvard-Westlake

Cathedral = 74

= 61

The Harvard-Westlake football team has the smallest roster in the Mission League.

Corrin ’16 starts running with a quick, short burst of speed to gain momentum.1

With both legs in the air, Corrin enters the front handspring phase, flipping both legs over her head.3

Next, she plants the ball on the ground with both hands as she begins lifting both of her legs off the ground. 2

Flip Out Step-by-step flip throw-in

24 • BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014

Finally, she lands close to the ground to help maintain her center of gravity and balance and releases the ball.5

As she comes up from the front handspring, she pre-pares to use the momentum to propel the ball forward.4

Corrin rises after releasing the ball, and she completes her throw-in and front handspring successfully.6

Courtney Corrin ‘16 demonstrates a flip throw-in on Ted Slavin Field. Corrin is a mem-ber of the varsity girls’ soccer team and also does track and field both in and outside of school. Last spring Corrin won the national long jump title at New Balance National out-door track and field championships, jumping 21 feet even, the national freshman record.

BY AUDREY WILSON

Photographs by AUDREY WILSON

BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014 • 25

Gary Bairos began wres-tling at the age of 10 be-cause he was too small to play Pop-Warner foot-

ball. By the time he graduated from high school he was the California state wrestling champion.

“I liked the sort of virtuoso, you were your own team. You con-trolled your own destiny,” Bairos said. “That appealed to me. It was scary in some ways but I really re-sponded to it and found it a great challenge.”

Bairos went on to wrestle un-der coach Bobby Douglas at Ari-zona State University, who was the United States Olympic team coach at the time.

Bairos was team captain and the Sun Devils won the NCAA team title in 1988.

“I used to get beat as a kid and I basically promised myself that I am going to stay in this sport long enough to get all the people back that had beaten me,” Bairos said.

While he had aspirations to go to the Olympics, Bairos decided to stop wrestling competitively and focus on documentary filmmaking and screenwriting.

“When Bobby Douglas recruit-ed me out of high school, the whole pitch was [to] go from college wres-tling to having an international ca-reer. That was his journey and he wanted to recruit athletes that were

world class,” Bairos said. “After four years of college wrestling, I just re-ally wanted to go in another direc-tion and I made a decision and it was tough.”

Bairos never planned to be a high school wrestling coach but while he was living in Los Ange-les he was offered the opportunity to help with the Harvard-Westlake team and his commitment grew until he became head coach.

When he came to Harvard-Westlake, the six-man team had a room in Taper but it was removed to add the weight room.

The school built the current wrestling room in the old Hamilton gym locker room.

“It started with six guys, but two or three of those six were pretty darn good. They started to make some noise in CIF. We’ve never been a huge team but we’ve had some kids that have done really well,” Bairos said. “We are respect-ed around California wrestling as a team that’s not big but always has a few guys that will win big.”

The team’s numbers have grown and the team has around 20 wrestlers now. Bairos said the ninth grade class is the best class of wrestlers to come through the school during his time at Harvard-Westlake.

“We are really building some-thing,” Bairos said. “I can really feel

it.”Bairos said

that he believes this year’s se-nior class has a lot of potential to place in CIF. The rest of the team is com-posed of young wrestlers, mainly freshmen.

Alex Lange ’14 credits Bairos attention to detail with the im-provement of the team this year.

“[Bairos] pays attention to everyone on the team and knows what everyone needs to work on and how to help them improve,” Lange said. “He always makes an effort to connect with every wres-tler and I’m proud to have him as my coach.”

“The older kids are nurturing the young kids,” Bairos said. “We’re really a tight knit group. It’s worked really well that 12th graders are working with ninth graders.”

Patrick Halkett ’14 said Bai-ros is extremely patient with his athletes, never yelling at them and understanding the amount of stress associated with going to Harvard-Westlake.

“I think Gary is one of the most respectable coaches there is. He has taught me so much not only about wrestling, but also how to be a good leader,” Halkett said. “I probably

THE GARY BAIROS STORYA Junkyard Dog:

I BASICALLY PROM-ISED MYSELF THAT I AM GOING TO STAY IN THIS SPORT LONG ENOUGH TO GET ALL THE PEOPLE BACK THAT HAD BEATEN ME,” BAIROS SAID.

“DIDAX

Gary Bairos

Wrestling coach Gary Bairos made the decision to stop wres-tling competitively following a storied collegiate career at Arizona State. Rather than try to make the Olympics, he chose to make documentaries and write screenplays. Along the way he took over the Wolverine program as head coach.

BY PATRICK RYAN

26 • BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014

THE JUNKYARD DOGSGary Bairos, seated in center, poses with his team for the team photo in the wrestling room in Hamilton gymnasium.

PRINTED WITH PERMISSION OF REGGIE FERRAZ/WWW.REGGIEFERRAZ.COM

wouldn’t be the same kind of athlete or person without him.”

Bairos said that Jake Adler ’17 is the most developed wrestler he has ever seen as a freshman.

Adler has worked with Bairos for the past three or four years with Bairos’ Junk-yard Dogs Wrestling Club.

“I’m really excited to watch Jake Adler and see what he can do this year and develop into a high school wrestler,” Bai-ros said. “The sky is the limit. He could be really something. He’s a very exciting wrestler to watch.”

“We are trying to strength-en our middle school pro-gram. I really feel for the first time that we have some sort of continuity,” Bairos said. “We’re on the same page. I feel good about things right now going

forward.”Bairos made a documen-

tary film entitled Junkyard Dogs, which chronicles the de-velopment of Kenji Porter ’06 who placed fifth in the Cali-fornia State Championship his senior year.

“I enjoy taking a kid who maybe never even thought he could be an athlete and turn-ing him into a good wrestler. That means something to me,” Bairos said.

“Even if the kids never be-come state champions or we never win the state team title because we don’t have enough kids, I get great enjoyment out of seeing kids find themselves and gain confidence that they never thought they could ever wrestle somebody and win. I get a lot out of watching them grow and gain confidence.”

CAITLIN NEAPOLE/BIG RED

A WATCHFUL EYEGary Bairos offers instruction to Jake Adler ’17 during the team’s dual against Bishop Amat Dec. 11.

BIG RED WINTER 2013-2014 • 27