A Dominant Duo: Luce and Pohl Lead Cypress to Glory
The 1987 Cypress High School softball team was a force to be reckoned with, led by the dynamic duo of pitcher Nicky Luce and catcher Diane Pohl. Luce, who was named CIF Player of the Year, dominated opposing batters with her pinpoint accuracy and powerful pitches. Pohl, a skilled defensive catcher, provided steady leadership behind the plate and was named All-CIF for her contributions.
In the semi-final round, the Centurions faced off against Marina High School in a tense and closely contested match. The game was a pitcher's duel between Luce and Marina's Christy Larsen, two of the top pitchers in the region. The game remained scoreless until the seventh inning, when Cypress finally broke through, scoring the winning run on a timely hit by Heim.
The championship game against Thousand Oaks was a showcase of the Centurions' dominance. Luce once again delivered a stellar performance, striking out 11 batters and leading the team to a 5-0 victory. This marked the second CIF title for Cypress High School softball in four years, solidifying their place as one of the top softball programs in Southern California.
The 1987 team, with its talented players and dedicated coaching staff, left an enduring legacy on Cypress High School. Their hard work, determination, and skill continue to inspire future generations of Centurions.
By ROBYN NORWOOD
June 7, 1987 12 AM PT
Times Staff Writer
LAKEWOOD — When it came time to hand out the individual awards to the Southern Section 4-A softball champions, they saved the last and longest ovation for Nicky Luce, the Cypress High School pitcher.
Luce threw a three-hit shutout, and Cypress cruised to a 5-0 victory over Thousand Oaks Saturday night at Mayfair Park, winning the 4-A championship for the second time in four years.
The Centurions also won the title in 1983.
Although fans in left field hung 12 Ks between an N-I-C and a Y, Luce actually finished with 11 strikeouts, which certainly sufficed.
Luce didn’t allow a hit to anyone other than Julie Chellevold, the Thousand Oaks leadoff batter who went 3 for 3.
“I didn’t really know who was who,” Luce said. “She just had my number.”
The victory was the 69th and final of Luce’s three-year career at Cypress. She finished this season 21-5.
Cypress (22-8) took a 2-0 lead in the third inning and was never challenged seriously. Joanne Brodeur drove in two runs with a two-out double down the third-base line, scoring Diane Pohl and Luce. Pohl had walked, and Luce’s hit to left-center was ruled a ground-rule double, stopping Pohl at third before Brodeur’s double.
“The key was that our kids came out and hit the ball, and Nicky did her usual job,” said Tom Farr, Cypress coach. “I didn’t think it would be easy.”
As it turned out, it was remarkably so.
“This is the type of pitcher--fastball, riseball--our kids can get on,” Farr said of Thousand Oaks starter Shireen Campbell (13-7), who pitched five innings and took the loss. “It’s the off-speed pitchers we have problems with.”
Cypress could have gotten by with four fewer runs than it did, with Luce and the defense holding the Lancers (23-9) scoreless.
Thousand Oaks threatened in the first inning, advancing a runner as far as third with one out, but was unable to score. Chellevold led off the game with an infield single and stole second, going to third. But Luce struck out the next two batters, ending the inning.
Chellevold got as far as third again in the sixth, singling and going to third on an error, but Luce got out of the inning with a groundout.
Cypress advanced runners as far as third base in every inning after the first.
In the second, Thousand Oaks center fielder Shani Smith prevented a run when she threw out Karen Kuyper at the plate on Heidi Heim’s attempted sacrifice fly. Kuyper reached on a fielder’s choice, advancing to third on two wild pitches.
But Thousand Oaks couldn’t stop the Centurions in the sixth, as they scored three runs on two hits, two errors and a walk.
By ROBYN NORWOOD
June 3, 1987 12 AM PT
Times Staff Writer
Almost everyone watching and perhaps some of those playing had probably begun to think about extra innings Tuesday as the Cypress and Marina high school softball teams took a scoreless tie into the seventh inning at Arnold Park in Cypress.
With two of Orange County’s best pitchers--Cypress’ Nicky Luce and Marina’s Christy Larsen--on the mound, everyone watching knew this one could go on for a long time.
And with a spot in the Southern Section 4-A championship game at stake, it seemed likely to.
But with two out in the bottom of the seventh, and the count a ball and two strikes on Heidi Heim, who is the bottom batter in the Cypress order and had struck out twice, the end came suddenly.
Heim stepped to the plate thinking it was “now or never,” even though, with no score and a field equipped with lights, the game could have stretched far into the evening. But she ended it right there, looping a 1-2 pitch into left-center field over the heads of a shallow outfield, scoring Karen Kuypers from second.
Kuypers had reached on an error by Marina second baseman Monica Marrero, advancing to second on a sacrifice.