Joe Cantarella
- Share via
Barry Faulkner
The distinction exists between having fun playing baseball and
playing baseball to have fun.
The former takes place in major league replica uniforms, among
fresh-faced Little Leaguers who often merely bide their time between
the lines as prelude to the postgame pizza party.
The latter begins to occur wearing school colors, when hitting the
cutoff man is no longer the product of a short throw from a reluctant
outfielder and the minutia of the game takes on a mystic importance
to prep players approaching the peak of their physical prowess.
Sometime over the summer before his junior year, Newport Harbor
High pitcher Joe Cantarella made the often imperceptible shift,
consciously choosing to tackle his debut varsity season with a
healthy respect, as well as an abiding love, for the game.
“I just decided I wasn’t going to be the same person I was,” said
Cantarella, whose determination led him out of a pack of newcomers
into the Sailors’ starting rotation, from where he has emerged as the
team’s most successful pitcher.
Though still a source of levity that prompts Coach Joel Desguin to
describe him as a free spirit, when Cantarella takes the mound, it is
usually his teammates who try to keep him loose, not the other way
around. Facing his catcher from his elevated perch in the center of
the diamond, he is more about punch-outs than punch lines, more about
gripping the stitches than inducing them with his wit.
“I’ve really seen him maturing in the last couple months,” Desguin
said. “There is a time for joking around and a time to be serious and
compete. He likes to compete.”
Mixing and spotting his fastball, curveball and changeup,
Cantarella has gotten the best of the competition thus far. And his
willingness to compete was never more evident than in Friday’s
complete-game, two-hit shutout in a 1-0 Sea View League victory over
visiting Laguna Hills.
“I was very motivated to get our first league win,” Cantarella
said of Friday’s triumph, which snapped the program’s 19-game Sea
View League losing streak, dating back to the spring of 2001. “We all
wanted that win pretty badly, because it had been a 19-game
frustration.”
Cantarella sailed through the first six innings, facing the
minimum and benefiting from a fifth-inning run by the Sailors. But,
he said, the one-run lead only heaped more pressure onto his 6-foot,
155-pound frame.
“When we got that one run, I knew I couldn’t make a mistake,” the
Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week said. “Some of my teammates were
trying to keep me calm.”
A walk and the second Laguna Hills hit put runners at first and
second with two outs in the seventh, but Cantarella induced a pop-up
to the third baseman to protect the shutout. The win evened
Cantarella’s record at 2-2, lowered his ERA to 2.74 and sparked a
joyous celebration.
“As soon as our third baseman caught it, I ran right over to him
and jumped on him,” Cantarella said. “It was the best. I’ve never had
a better feeling in baseball my whole life.”
Baseball has been a big part of Cantarella’s life since childhood
and control has always been his biggest asset as a pitcher.
“He goes right after hitters, works ahead and makes good pitches,”
Desguin said of his right-hander, who has fanned eight and walked
seven in 23 innings this spring.
“I’ve always been good with my mechanics and I’ve always had
pretty good control,” Cantarella said. “But when I came to the
varsity, I really wanted to focus on keeping the ball down and
limiting my mistakes, because these aren’t little guys hitting the
ball anymore. If you miss your spots at this level, guys will start
killing the ball.”
Cantarella said the shutout victory over Laguna Hills was
extremely satisfying, but even his approach to success has now
changed.
“Last year, I would have been bragging about it,” he said. “Now, I
want to keep quiet about it. I just loved being a part of [the win],
but I want to just let it go.”
By letting go of a more casual approach to the game, Cantarella
has freed himself up to not only achieve, but enjoy and appreciate
his mound success.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.