
Stagecoach 2023: See photos of performers and fans from Day 1
- April 29, 2023
The 15th annual Stagecoach Country Music Festival kicked off at the Empire Polo Club in Indio on Friday, April 28 and it was a scorcher.
Temperatures reached 100 degrees as gates opened at noon and fans filed in to see performances by Luke Bryan, Jon Pardi, Riley Green, Elle King, Breland, Priscilla Block and more on the Mane Stage. Over inside the Palomino, guests were treated to turns by rockers ZZ Top, Melissa Etheridge, Sammy Kershaw, Flamin’ Groovies and others.
RELATED: Stagecoach 2023: Luke Bryan keeps fans singing, Jon Pardi gets a surprise on stage during Day 1
Throughout the event, fans tried to beat the heat by ducking into several air-conditioned activations and stage areas, including the Honky Tonk, which this year was curated by EDM artist and producer, Diplo. Girl Talk, Disko Cowboy and Flying Mojito Bros kept patrons cool and dancing throughout the day. King and Block also surprised guests inside the Shein Saloon on-site by popping in for quick meet and greets and a little Cowboy Karaoke.
Fans of Guy Fieri — and people who just like really good barbecue — hung out at the Stagecoach Smokehouse where Fieri and a few famous faces, including Pardi and ZZ Top, shared barbecue tips, did demonstrations and handed out free samples.
Those that still wanted to party, headed over for the Late Night in Palomino programming, which was hosted by drag queen, TV personality and singer-songwriter Trixie Mattel on Friday night.
More Stagecoach Country Music Festival news
Stagecoach 2023: Country music fans, performers brave the heat and cut loose during Day 1
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Stagecoach 2023: Brooks & Dunn return to the desert and they’re ready to party
Stagecoach 2023: Everything you need to know about the country music fest
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Stagecoach 2023: Girl Talk, Dillon Francis, Lost Frequencies hit the Honky Tonk
Stagecoach 2023: Trixie Mattel, Nelly and Diplo host Late Night in Palomino
Stagecoach 2023: Luke Bryan, Kane Brown and Chris Stapleton will headline the country fest in Indio
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Clerical mistake with entries costs El Toro girls swimming league title
- April 29, 2023
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A clerical mistake with entries prevented El Toro’s girls swimming team from racing the relays at the Sea View League finals on Friday, Chargers athletic director Armando Rivas confirmed.
The host Chargers didn’t race in finals of the 200-yard medley relay, 200 freestyle relay or 400 freestyle relay, according to results online, and it cost them the league title.
El Toro scored 435 points off individual events — by far the most among Dana Hills, Mission Viejo and Trabuco Hills — but didn’t record any points in relays to finish second behind Dana Hills. The Dolphins tallied 475 total points, including 184 on relays — to capture their first league title.
Mission Viejo and Trabuco Hills scored 396 and 333 points, respectively.
El Toro beat Dana Hills, Mission Viejo and Trabuco Hills in league duals by large margins.
The Chargers, a Division 2 team for CIF-SS competition next week, achieved at least CIF consideration times in all three relays during the league dual meets, based on results online.
Teams qualify for the CIF preliminaries based on times posted throughout the season but most of the fastest times are often posted at the league finals.
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The Division 2 preliminaries are May 3 at 9 a.m. at Riverside City College.
Nevada-bound senior Henley Kerr led El Toro at the league finals by winning the 200 free (1:58.48) and 100 breast (1:03.82). Senior Angelina Kashani also was a double-winner for the Chargers in the 100 butterfly (58.95) and 100 back (1:00.34).
Senior Sadie Riester and junior Julia Gordon won the 100 free (55.57) and 200 individual medley (2:09.88), respectively, for Division 2 Dana Hills.
Please send swimming news to Dan Albano at [email protected] or @ocvarsityguy on Twitter
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Santa Anita horse racing consensus picks, Saturday, April 29, 2023
- April 29, 2023
The consensus box of Santa Anita horse racing picks comes from handicappers Bob Mieszerski, Art Wilson, Terry Turrell and Eddie Wilson. Here are the picks for thoroughbred races on Saturday, April 29, 2023.
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Swanson: LeBron James, Lakers are much better in closeout win, as promised
- April 29, 2023
LOS ANGELES — We’ve got deep fakes and self-cloning. Losing isn’t failing. And if you speak Clipper, a sprain and a tear are one in the same. Also, war is peace. Ignorance is strength. Two and two make five.
But we have LeBron James, old reliable, a man who means what he says and says what he means.
When he swore – “I was (expletive)” – after a 5-for-17 effort in a coulda-closed-out game in Memphis on Wednesday and then swore, “I’ll be better in Game 6,” he darn well intended to follow through.
So Friday, in the seventh-seeded Lakers’ swashbuckling 125-85 closeout win against the second-seeded Memphis Grizzlies – ending their first-round Western Conference playoff series in six games – he uncorked clinical, classic LeBron, vintage 1984.
If not exactly better with age, then still better than 99.9% of the basketball players on the planet. The ultimate tone-setter, he did us a solid by going out and restoring some faith in reality at Crypto.com Arena.
He was at the arena five hours early, “locked in as usual,” Lakers coach Darvin Ham said. “Nothing different, you know. Just normal LeBron.”
A normal day at the office? A big day, a bring-your-“Game 7 mentality”-to-work day, James said. Whatever it took to avoid a third trip to Memphis.
As Anthony Davis swooped and swatted and D’Angelo Russell poured in a playoff career-high 31 points, a rested-as-possible James delivered a presentation of Actual Intelligence. With his off-ball, driving-and-dishing display, he found colleagues open in the corners and at the rim, beneficiaries of James’ calculations, which added up to six assists.
And he kept them in line, staring down Austin Reaves after a missed assignment – Reaves said he got the message: “We ain’t doing that, you gotta get there” – and then he danced with the youngster after Reaves finished a nifty Euro-step-into-a-reverse-layup.
AUSTIN REAVES AND LEBRON GOING CRAZYYY!!!! pic.twitter.com/6yclkVnkEo
— LakeShowYo (@LakeShowYo) April 29, 2023
He modeled predictive rebounding (five for the game) and lent his presence to a defense that was clicking, unbothered, unruffled, organized.
Behind Davis’ five monster blocked shots and 14 rebounds, the Lakers squeezed all the brash out of the big-talking Grizzlies, who shot a pitiful, pitiable 30.2%, scored fewer points than they had all season, and lost by a larger margin than in any game but two.
Rhythm and flow: James logged an easy and series-low 31 minutes, finished a team-high plus-32 in the box score and shot 9 for 13 for 22 points.
“Felt pretty good when I woke up this morning,” James said during a jovial postgame news conference. “Felt excellent, actually.”
He cut back on the 3-point attempts that had been nearly 40% of his shot diet in the first five games. A selection that was giving the Lakers mostly empty calories: He was shooting 16.7% on 36 of them, worse than anyone who had shot so many from deep this postseason – even Memphis’ Dillon Brooks, who entered Friday 8 for 37 from behind the arc.
Only five of James’ attempts Friday night were from 3-point range, and seven of his baskets were from close range.
He did decree.
Told us so and then went gliding for a smooth reverse dunk late in the first half that pushed the Lakers’ lead to 59-42 and bumped James’ own tally to 16 on 7-for-9 shooting.
I saw the play unfold and figured he’d get a layup but I did NOT have reverse dunk on my bingo card.. at 38??? #LeBron #WUT pic.twitter.com/Y7UBveKSDR
— BBALLBREAKDOWN (@bballbreakdown) April 29, 2023
“It definitely starts with me,” James had said Wednesday night in Memphis, ahead of his four-hour commute back to L.A. ahead of work Friday, the first-round series having picked up to a tiring every-other-day beat. “I was not very good at all. I think defensively, I was pretty good, but offensively, I was not really good.”
Age ain’t nothing – but the numbers said the 38-year-old James shot 29.4% in Game 5, which was worse than in all but nine of his 271 previous career playoff games, his teams now 2-10 in games when he makes fewer than 30% of his shot attempts.
Ham knew his biggest star would come out of it Friday: “He’ll definitely catch rhythm, catch fire at some point tonight. Hopefully from the outset.”
The Lakers had their first lead halfway through the first quarter and never gave it back.
And their leader, 20 years into his NBA employment and spry enough still to run one of the NBA’s youngest teams out of the gym, led the charge.
James’ vision is sharp, seeing 20-20 in the Lakers’ 117-111 Game 4 win, when he recorded his first 20-point, 20-rebound game that night, the first in the playoffs by a Laker since Shaquille O’Neal did it in 2004.
And now he’s earned some valuable time off while the Lakers wait for Golden State and Sacramento to sort themselves out up north, their first-round series going to a winner-take-all seventh game on Sunday.
A blow, a breather, critical before the Lakers get back to playing every other day, before James gets back to the business of being better.
As James told his teammates: “As hard as this series felt, as hard as this series was, it gets even harder when you move a level up. So we were able to conquer Level 1, now we’ll move to Level 2, it gets harder. They understood that and they’ll be ready for it.”
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Dodgers hit 2 home runs, catch a few breaks to beat Cardinals
- April 29, 2023
LOS ANGELES — The Roman philosopher Seneca is said to have defined luck as “what happens what preparation meets opportunity.”
Jason Heyward certainly had prepared to face St. Louis Cardinals pitcher Jack Flaherty before Friday’s game at Dodger Stadium. The two had seen each other plenty, with Heyward collecting two hits in 18 at-bats. And in the third inning he had an opportunity, with Max Muncy on second base and a bat in his hands.
Heyward didn’t get all of a two-strike curveball from Flaherty when he poked a dribbler inside the third base line, yet no fielders were close enough to stop it with a broom. The ball wound up in left field, Muncy scored easily from second base, and the Dodgers had the kind of lucky break that has eluded them so often in 2023.
The Dodgers caught a few breaks en route to a 7-3 victory over the Cardinals before an announced crowd of 48,138 at Dodger Stadium. The win snapped a two-game losing streak and kicked off a six-game homestand by lifting the Dodgers (14-13) back above .500.
Heyward also made a sliding catch in right field and finished 2 for 2 with two RBIs against Flaherty (2-3).
“(The double) was one of those times that it worked out and got by (Nolan) Arenado somehow,” Heyward said. “That’s what it takes sometimes.”
His billiard shot into left field was not even his most fortunate stroke Friday. In the fifth inning, Heyward flew out to deep right field for the apparent second out of the inning. But catcher Willson Contreras’ mitt impeded the trajectory of Heyward’s bat – a catcher’s interference error – and the bases were suddenly loaded for James Outman.
Outman, who had struck out in seven consecutive at-bats, was hit in the foot with a curveball, driving in the Dodgers’ fifth run.
The Dodgers scored in more traditional fashions too. Mookie Betts led off the game with a homer for the 38th time in his career, the 10th-most in major league history. Miguel Vargas hit a two-run home run, his first of the season, in the seventh inning.
The offensive outburst was more than enough for Dodgers starter Dustin May. After enduring a 26-pitch first inning, May (3-1) emerged victorious for the second time in his last two starts.
The Cardinals tallied two walks, a double, a stolen base, a sacrifice fly, and scored on a wild pitch to take a 2-0 lead before the Dodgers came to bat.
“I was comfortable the whole night,” May said. “I just wasn’t locating anything (in the first inning), spraying everything around, then settled in.”
Betts halved the Dodgers’ deficit with his fourth home run of the season. Later in the first inning, Heyward smoked an RBI single into right field to score another run, helped in part by an error by Lars Nootbaar.
May’s four walks in five innings contributed to his bloated total of 104 pitches, a career high. The right-hander also allowed only three hits and struck out four.
“I would definitely like to get more than five (innings) in a game, but at that point in time I had wasted a lot of throws, thrown a lot of balls,” May said. “It was good to get through five and help the guys out in the ’pen.”
The Dodgers needed five relievers – Caleb Ferguson, Victor Gonzalez, Brusdar Graterol, Shelby Miller and Alex Vesia – to navigate umpire Nate Tomlinson’s stingy strike zone. They combined to issue three walks over the final four innings, but they did not allow a run until St. Louis rallied for one against Vesia in the bottom of the ninth.
After spending the last two weeks on the injured list with a concussion, Will Smith was activated before the game and went 1 for 5 as the Dodgers’ designated hitter.
In his return from paternity leave, Muncy went 1 for 2 with two walks and an RBI double – the key hit in the Dodgers’ third-inning rally that gave them the lead for good.
Graterol, also back from the paternity list, got Paul Goldschmidt to pop out to end the seventh inning on the only pitch he threw.
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If you don’t like San Francisco, that’s fine, but don’t spread tall tales about it
- April 29, 2023
SACRAMENTO – To hear conservatives describe the state of affairs in San Francisco, you’d think the City by the Bay is a harrowing dystopia along the lines of San Salvador, Juarez, St. Louis or Detroit. I can’t tell you how many people have warned me against spending time there – or talked about the “poop app” that helps visitors avoid human feces on the sidewalks.
“San Francisco is sunk in a rancid drug-ravaged pit of human misery and city leaders have no idea how to pull themselves out of it,” wrote David Marcus in his Fox News column last year. He knows why: “(B)ecause the progressive lunatics running the city believe that every criminal is a victim.”
This week, I read a Twitter debate about which American city would essentially collapse under the weight of its own lunacy. Predictably, San Francisco topped the list. “Look what’s happened to San Francisco,” Donald Trump said during a 2020 campaign stop in Bakersfield. “It’s worse than a slum, there’s no slum like that.”
I suspect that many of the San Francisco doom-tellers haven’t been there, but even many who have join the chorus. Michael Shellenberger’s well-known book is called “San Fransicko: Why Progressives Ruin Cities.” He makes some solid points – progressives do wreck everything they touch – but his title promotes the “nightmare” theme.
I travel to San Francisco regularly and have visited almost every corner of the city. I spent most of last week there for a wedding on Nob Hill and traipsed around several neighborhoods: Chinatown, North Beach, Alamo Square and South of Market (SoMa). Not only did I live to tell about it, but left with warm fuzzies even after wandering its streets late at night.
San Francisco remains (arguably) the most beautiful city in the country. Its parks are lovely and mostly orderly and clean. On Sunday, we played miniature golf and frequented food trucks, along with hundreds of young families. People were friendly and the restaurants and nightlife were fabulous. Most neighborhoods are surprisingly quiet and safe.
The city’s critics aren’t entirely wrong, of course. Locals warned us not to leave anything in our cars given surging property crimes. The Tenderloin – the notoriously downtrodden downtown neighborhood – is an open sewer of drug dealing and panhandling, just as critics say. Homeless tents line a portion of Market Street near the main shopping drag. But is it fair to define an entire city that way?
Simply put, conservatives bash San Francisco because of the city’s progressive politics, just as liberals portray Republican states such as Texas as redoubts of sexism and racism. For instance, California lawmakers have banned official travel to 22 supposedly backward states. In both cases, politically minded people embrace stupid narratives that confirm their biases.
The San Francisco Chronicle looked at San Francisco’s crime data in 2022 and found that crime rates soared after lockdowns temporarily turned the city into a ghost town, but overall rates are in a downward trend over five years. The murder rate increased since the end of COVID, but the city’s murder rate is “towards the bottom for major cities,” Police Chief Bill Scott told a local CNN affiliate.
It’s a mixed bag, but my sense is the city government’s lackadaisical approach toward lower-level crime and homelessness has created a sense of civic disorder. Many property crimes aren’t reported, so the crime problem is deeper than the data suggest. Residents understandably are feeling jittery about their overall safety.
So after a high-profile murder – such as when tech entrepreneur Bill Lee was murdered this month on a downtown street – it feeds the narrative of a terribly dangerous city, even if the murder might not have been a random attack. None of my caveats are meant to downplay the seriousness of any crime, but to put the matter in perspective.
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I lived in Washington, D.C., in the 1970s and 1980s – when the murder epidemic was so severe that local newspapers published a death toll on the front pages every day. Crime rates have fallen dramatically nationwide since then, but have increased in recent years. Crime and homelessness partly explain why San Francisco has lost so much population, but crime isn’t nearly as bad as those days.
Marcus lives in West Virginia, which has endured an appalling opioid overdose crisis. Yet that hardly defines an entire state. Isn’t it better to figure out how to deal with these problems rather than just score partisan political points? My sense in San Francisco’s critics despise the city’s politics, so they jump on every bad event to conform to their narrative.
San Francisco is unlikely to ever become a conservative paradise, but even the politics there is self-correcting. Last year, voters recalled their soft-on-crime district attorney Chesa Boudin. The newly appointed DA has vowed to clean up the streets. If you don’t like San Francisco, that’s fine, but don’t spread tall tales about it.
Steven Greenhut is Western region director at the R Street Institute and a member of the Southern California News Group editorial board. Write to him at [email protected].
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Lakers crush Grizzlies in Game 6, advance to 2nd round
- April 29, 2023
LOS ANGELES — The Lakers handled their business in no uncertain terms Friday night, dispatching the Memphis Grizzlies swiftly and certainly in Game 6 of their first-round playoff series at Crypto.com Arena. It was close for a while, but then the Lakers rocketed away to the second round.
The Lakers’ decisive 125-85 victory was nostalgic in so many ways, not the least of which was the dominating way in which they overwhelmed a talented but ultimately overmatched opponent. The Lakers were seeded seventh and the Grizzlies were seeded second. Upset?
Maybe. Maybe not.
To be sure, LeBron James and Anthony Davis presented problems the short-handed Grizzlies couldn’t solve at various points during the series, and their championship pedigree should not be overlooked in a playoff game with so much at stake. The Grizzlies, young and talented but missing two of their key frontcourt players, were unprepared for what hit them.
James scored 22 points, Davis had 16 points, 14 rebounds and five blocked shots, and D’Angelo Russell set a playoff career-high with 31 points on 12-for-17 shooting (5 for 9 from 3-point range) as the Lakers led by as many as 40 points. They turned a 59-42 halftime lead into a 100-67 advantage entering the fourth quarter with an electric third.
Santi Aldama led Memphis with 16 points.
It was the Lakers’ first playoff series win on their home court since they beat the Oklahoma City Thunder in Game 3 of a second-round series in May 2012. The Lakers won the franchise’s 17th NBA championship in 2020 in the pandemic bubble in Orlando, Fla., beating the Miami Heat with only family members in attendance.
The Lakers advanced Friday to meet the winner of the Golden State Warriors-Sacramento Kings series in the second round. The Kings forced the Warriors to a winner-take-all Game 7 on Sunday afternoon in Sacramento with a 118-99 victory in Game 6 on Friday night in San Francisco.
The Lakers had wilted in the closing minutes of the third quarter in Game 5 in Memphis, losing to the Grizzlies and setting up what loomed as a must-win Game 6 in Los Angeles. The Lakers needed a win to avoid a Game 7 in FedEx Forum, where the Grizzlies had the best home record in the NBA this season; the Grizzlies needed a win to avoid vacation.
After a few moments of uncertainty Friday, the Lakers found a rhythm that was lacking in their 116-99 loss to the Grizzlies on Wednesday. The Lakers built a 20-point lead late in the second quarter and seemed poised to run away with Game 6 before the teams could even reach halftime.
With a raucous sellout crowd of 18,997 urging them onward and upward, the Lakers held a 59-42 lead by halftime on the strength of 59.5% shooting and a defense that limited the Grizzlies to 32.7% shooting. The Lakers’ best players were their best players.
James had 16 points on 7-for-9 shooting by halftime, and Davis had 11 points and 10 rebounds. What’s more, Davis was at his best when defending the Grizzlies’ big men, Jaren Jackson Jr. and Xavier Tillman Sr. Jackson and Tillman got into foul trouble in the second quarter and were non-factors.
Jackson had the same number of fouls as points (three) and Tillman had twice as many fouls (four) as points (two) by halftime. The Lakers took advantage by scoring 36 of their first 59 points in the paint. The Grizzlies scored only 16 of their 42 points in the paint, relying mostly on perimeter shots.
Eighteen of the Grizzlies’ first-half attempts were from behind the 3-point arc.
Russell got the Lakers pointed in the right direction by scoring 10 of their first 25 points, making five of his first seven shots and helping them to a 25-16 lead with a 3-pointer that forced Memphis to call a timeout with 2:45 left in the first quarter. The Lakers were in control from that point.
Russell hit 3-pointers on consecutive trips early in the third and Jarred Vanderbilt hit a third 3 moments later to extend the Lakers’ lead to 68-45 and force the Grizzlies to take a timeout with 10:21 left in the quarter. The crowd was in a celebratory mood by then, roaring ever louder.
James and Davis have won a title together, but they had done little to remember in front of their home fans before the past two months, when their supporting cast markedly improved at the trade deadline with several additions headlined by Russell. The dynamic duo improved to 5-0 in playoff series in which they both appeared in every game together.
Lakers fans sensed the enormity of the moment and turned out in force, highlighted by the return of the 86-year-old Nicholson to his courtside seats after a nearly two-year absence.
More to come on this story.
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A look at Orange County’s baseball teams and the CIF-SS playoffs
- April 29, 2023
The CIF Southern Section baseball regular season is finished.
The playoff brackets will be released Monday at 10 a.m.
Teams qualified for the playoffs by earning one of their league’s guaranteed playoff berths. The top two teams, for example, in a four-team league received playoffs berths; the top three teams in five- and six-team leagues, and so on.
(That information and more about the playoffs can be found in the CIF-SS playoff bulletin.)
There are seven divisions in the playoffs, which begin with wild-card round games, if needed, Tuesday and Wednesday.
First-round games are Thursday for Divisions 1, 3, 5 and 7, and Friday for Divisions 2, 4 and 6.
For all divisions, second-round games are May 9, quarterfinals on May 12, semifinals on May 16 and finals on May 19 and 20 at Blair Field in Long Beach.
Here’s a league-by-league look at the automatic qualifiers, potential at-large teams and some notes on each league.
(A team’s overall record and playoff division are in parentheses.)
CRESTVIEW LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Villa Park (18-10, Division 1); 2. El Dorado (16-11, Division 1).
At-large candidates: El Modena (14-12-1, Division 2); Foothill (14-14, Division 1).
Noteworthy: Villa Park’s Zach Brown has a team-high 21 RBIs and on the mound is 5-2, and Brandon Luu has a 1.18 ERA and 78 strikeouts in 53.1 innings. … El Dorado shut out Foothill 4-0 on Thursday to clinch the league’s second and final guaranteed playoff berth. … El Modena and Foothill could be viable at-large candidates if there are enough at-large berths in their divisions to accommodate them.
Villa Park starting pitcher Brandon Luu delivers a pitch against El Dorado in a Crestview League baseball game in San Juan Capistrano on Thursday, March 23, 2023. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)
EMPIRE LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Cypress (21-7, Division 1); 2. Pacifica (21-3, Division 1); 3. Crean Lutheran (20-8, Division 4).
At-large candidate: Kennedy (13-12-1, Division 5).
Noteworthy: Cypress and Pacifica tied for the league championship; a coin flip designed Cypress as the league’s No. 1 playoff representative. Pacifica beat Cypress 4-2 on Tuesday, thanks in large part to Chad Gurnea’s three shutout innings of relief. On Thursday Cypress’ Chewy Thomas hit a walk-off home run in the ninth inning to give Cypress a 2-1 win. … Crean lost one-run games to Cypress and Pacifica.
Pacifica’s Chad Gurnea (3) delivers a pitch against Cypress during their Empire League game in Garden Grove, CA, on Tuesday, April 25, 2023. Pacifica defeated Cypress, 4 to 2. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
FREEWAY LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Fullerton (17-7, Division 2); 2. La Habra, 18-5-3, Division 4); 3. Sonora (13-15, Division 3).
At-large candidate: Sunny Hills (11-10-1, Division 4).
Noteworthy: Fullerton outfielder Connor Sunderland is batting .468 with 37 hits and 30 RBIs in 24 games. … La Habra pitcher Jared Day has a 1.07 ERA and 56 strikeouts in 48.1 innings.
Fullerton pitcher George Papadatos went five innings in a Freeway League game against La Habra on Wednesday, April 12. Papadatos gave up one hit and two walks with three strikeouts over five innings.(Photo by Lou Ponsi)
GARDEN GROVE LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Loara (10-10, Division 6); 2. Los Amigos (13-10, Division 6); 3. Santiago (9-11, Division 6).
At-large candidate: None
Noteworthy: Loara and Los Amigos both were 9-6 in league games. Loara is the league’s No. 1 playoff representative because Loara beat Los Amigos in two of their three league games.
Los Amigos’ Chris Betancourt crosses the plate to score a run against Loara in a Garden Grove League baseball game at Los Amigos High School in Fountain Valley on Friday, April 7, 2023. (Sam Gangwer, Contributing Photographer)
GOLDEN WEST LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Ocean View (18-10, Division 2); 2. Segerstrom (9-13-2, Division 3); 3. Katella (13-12, Division 5).
At-large candidate: None.
Noteworthy: Ocean View was 9-1 in league and has wins over several playoff teams, including Empire League co-champion Pacifica. … Katella pitcher Luis Tinoco has a 1.75 ERA and 47 strikeouts in 52 innings.
Ocean View pitcher Spencer Johnson pitched a complete game and struck out 10 in a 9-2 victory over Katella on Tuesday, April 25. (Photo by Lou Ponsi)
ORANGE LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Savanna (17-4-1, Division 5); 2. Century (19-9, Division 5); 3. Anaheim (13-12, Division 5).
At-large candidate: None.
Noteworthy: Savanna went 10-0 in the league while scoring 112 in its league games. … Century has wins over playoff teams Estancia, Orange and Santiago. … Anaheim lost to Estancia in 11 innings in last season’s Division 6 championship game.
ORANGE COAST LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Estancia (20-6, Division 5); 2. Orange (9-3, Division 4); 3. Calvary Chapel (14-13, Division 5); 4. Costa Mesa (18-8, Division 6).
At-large candidate: None
Noteworthy: Estancia, last season’s Division 6 champion, is led by pitcher/second baseman Andrew Mits and outfielder James De La O. … Orange won seven in a row to conclude the regular season. … Costa Mesa’s Grady Jackson has 35 RBIs.
Estancia’s John Uchytil runs down a sinking line drive into right field against Orange in an Orange Coast League baseball game in Orange on Friday, April 7, 2023. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)
NORTH HILLS LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Yorba Linda (13-12-1, Division 3); 2. Brea Olinda (13-12-2, Division 4).
At-large candidate: Canyon (14-12, Division 4).
Noteworthy: Yorba Linda won its first North Hills League championship. … Brea Olinda got a huge win Thursday, a 4-3 triumph over Yorba Linda to secure the league’s second and final guaranteed playoff berth.
Players on the Yorba Linda baseball team celebrate on the field after defeating Brea Olinda 7-3 to clinch the North Hills League title for the first time. (Photo by Manny Alvarez)
OLYMPIC LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Maranatha (20-5, Division 1); 2. Whittier Christian (13-11, Division 5); 3. Village Christian (10-14-1, Division 5); 4. Valley Christian (10-11, Division 5).
At-large candidate: None.
Noteworthy: Maranatha, which is good enough to have played in the Boras Classic South tournament, went 12-0 in league. … Whittier Christian gave Marantha its closest league loss, 4-0.
PACIFIC COAST LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Woodbridge (23-5, Division 2); 2. Northwood (17-11, Division 4); 3. Laguna Hills (18-9, Division 4); 4. Beckman (14-12-2, Division 3).
At-large candidate: University (14-13-1, Division 6).
Noteworthy: The Pacific Coast is an eight-team league in which every team plays a league opponent three times, so league games dominate the schedules. … Woodbridge, which went 19-2 in league, has a fine pitching staff that includes Matthew Kuromoto, who is 8-2 with a 1.03 ERA.
Woodbridge players and coaches pose for a group photo after winning the Pacific Coast League championship for the third year in a row. The Warriors defeated Beckman 14-5 on Thursday to clinch the title at Ryan Lemmon Park. (Photo by Lou Ponsi)
SAN JOAQUIN LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Capistrano Valley Christian (20-10, Division 2); 2. Calvary Chapel/Downey (15-8-2, Division 7); 3. Western Christian (15-2, Division 6); 4. Pacifica Christian (9-8-1, Division 7); 5. The Webb Schools (9-8-1, Division 7).
At-large candidate: None
Noteworthy: As a nine-team league the San Joaquin has five guaranteed entries for the playoffs. … Capistrano Valley Christian defeated Calvary Chapel on Friday afternoon to win the league championship.
SEA VIEW LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Aliso Niguel (14-13, Division 3); 2. San Clemente (18-10, Division 3).
At-large candidate: None.
Noteworthy: Aliso Niguel was 2-9 on March 24. The Wolverines have won six of their past seven games. … San Clemente’s Chase Brunson has 39 hits in 28 games.
Pitcher Cole Phister (26) pitches against San Juan Hills during a Sea View League baseball game at Aliso Niguel High School in Aliso Viejo on Thursday, April 27, 2023. (Photo by Leonard Ortiz, Orange County Register/SCNG)
SOUTH COAST LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Tesoro (19-8, Division 2); 2. Capistrano Valley (13-13, Division 1); 3. Dana Hills (10-17, Division 3).
At-large candidates: Mission Viejo (15-13, Division 2); Trabuco Hills (13-14, Division 1).
Noteworthy: Tesoro, last season’s Division 4 champion and a CIF SoCal Regional champion, too, is 13-2 in April. … Titans leaders include outfielders Jackson Freeman and Owen Faust. … Capistrano Valley lost two one-run, extra-innings games to Tesoro this week.
Players and coaches for the Tesoro baseball team celebrate with a group photo after winning the South Coast League title outright with an extra-inning win over Capistrano Valley on Wednesday. (Photo by Michael Huntley)
SURF LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Huntington Beach (20-8, Division 1); 2. Fountain Valley (15-10, Division 2).
At-large candidate: Los Alamitos (15-12, Division 1).
Noteworthy: In two mega-prestigious tournaments, Huntington Beach won the championship of the National High School Invitational and lost to Notre Dame of Sherman Oaks in the Boras Classic South championship game. … The Oilers have one of the county’s better power hitters, catcher/first baseman Ralphy Velazquea. … Fountain Valley won two of its three games against Huntington Beach.
Huntington Beach’s Brian Trujillo, right, is greeted by teammates at home plate after hitting a solo home run in the second inning against Fountain Valley in a Surf League baseball game in Fountain Valley on Friday, April 21, 2023. (Photo by Paul Rodriguez, Contributing Photographer)
TRINITY LEAGUE
Qualifiers: 1. Santa Margarita (18-9, Division 1); 2. Mater Dei (16-11-1, Division 2); 3. JSerra (18-9, Division 1).
At-large candidates: Orange Lutheran (17-10-1, Division 1); Servite (14-14, Division 1).
Noteworthy: No. 1-ranked Santa Margarita, which has a superb roster that includes Luke Lavin at catcher and Collin Clarke at pitcher, is among Orange County baseball’s bigger surprises this season. The Eagles won the championship in this great league with a 14-1 league record. … Mater Dei swept JSerra in an early-season, three-game series. … Defending Division 1 champion JSerra beat Orange Lutheran in two of three games in the final week of the regular season.
Santa Margarita players celebrate their 11-2 win over Mater Dei in a Trinity League game that clinched the league title for the Eagles for the first time in school history on Friday, April 21, 2023. (Photo by Jeff Antenore, Contributing Photographer)
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