Save Our Youth to take on city leaders
Susan McCormack
COSTA MESA -- Baseball season may be over, but fans need not despair.
They can get the next-best thing this Saturday morning at Lions Park when
members of the Costa Mesa City Council take on staffers from the Save Our
Youth gang intervention center in a long-awaited softball game.
Since 1994, the game has taken place each summer, except for last year,
and the city has won three of the four games. But Oscar Santoyo, Save Our
Youth director, said his team is poised to win this year because several
members of his 25-person team have participated in the event since its
inception, and they are now grown up.
“[Councilman] Joe Erickson’s been talking trash ... saying that they’re
going to win, but we’re pretty confident,” Santoyo said. “This year, some
of these kids are able to actually have some power behind their swing.”
Erickson said his team will include City Manager Allan Roeder, Council
members Libby Cowan and Linda Dixon and several commissioners and
firefighters. Mayor Gary Monahan is not expected to play due to a back
injury.
Erickson is not shy about bragging or riling up his teammates.
“I think we can win, even with our female council members on the team,”
he joked.
Though the game is played in good fun, Erickson and Santoyo said it is
important because it continues the legacy of Roy Alvarado, founder of
Save Our Youth, who died in 1996 after a long battle with cancer.
“Normally, the City Council wouldn’t get a chance to meet these kids,”
Santoyo said. “And when [these kids] see [council members] on the
streets, they have something in common with them -- they played ball
together. So these kids can feel like, ‘hey, I know that guy, and I
played against him. And I beat him.”’
Erickson said the relationship is worth building.
“People tend to put down young people ... but there is no bigger group of
volunteers than Save Our Youth,” he said. “They’re such a good asset to
the community.”
FYI
WHAT: Save Our Youth vs. City Council
WHERE: Lions Park, 570 W. 18th Street
WHEN: 10 a.m. Saturday
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