Los Angeles Times

El Toro star is the best, with a catch

El Toro’s Jackson put team ahead of himself a year ago. Now he’s at top of his game.

- ERIC SONDHEIMER ON HIGH SCHOOLS eric.sondheimer@latimes.com

Jake Jackson, a catcher in 2016, has become the top pitcher in Southern California, says Eric Sondheimer.

No one deserves to be starting on the mound at Dodger Stadium in the Southern Section Division 1 championsh­ip game more than senior right-hander Jake Jackson of Lake Forest El Toro.

A year ago, he made an incredibly unselfish decision for a high school athlete: He volunteere­d to play a position that wouldn’t help him for college. El Toro needed a catcher, and Jackson agreed to fill the role even though pitching was his strength.

He started every game behind the plate and didn’t worry that not pitching might affect his college recruitmen­t.

Fast forward to this season. Few people knew how good he might be because he didn’t pitch as a junior. Nevada recruiters saw him pitch one inning in a competitio­n two summers ago.

It was enough for the school to offer him a scholarshi­p (along with the fact his father played for former Nevada coach Gary Powers). And now Wolfpack coach T.J. Bruce is looking like a genius.

Jackson is the best pitcher in Southern California. He has a record of 11-1 with an 0.66 earned-run average and has walked only seven batters in 85 innings. His slider is about as nasty a pitch as you’ll see from a high school player.

“He’s taught himself everything,” Jackson’s father, Wade, said. “I sit behind home plate, and I’ve never seen a slider move like his does for an 18-year-old.”

Jackson gives up some hits, but his cool, calm confidence on the mound is extraordin­ary for someone who took a year off from pitching.

“High baseball IQ, and as competitiv­e as I’ve been around,” Bruce said.

Jackson and junior lefthander Erik Tolman (8-3), another player who didn’t pitch last season, have led El Toro into Friday’s 7:30 p.m. final against Corona. They have been so good that they each surpassed El Toro’s preseason top pitchers, Sam Glick, a UCLA signee, and Noah Fluman, a San Diego State signee. Both have been strong supporters of Jackson and Tolman’s, a key ingredient in El Toro’s team success.

Asked about pitching at Dodger Stadium, Jackson said, “I’m stoked.”

Pitching also should be prominent in Saturday’s 1 p.m. City Section Division I final at Dodger Stadium between Chatsworth and Birmingham.

Two left-handers, Thomas Gutierrez of Chatsworth and Armando Yanez of Birmingham, will get the start. Gutierrez is 11-0 with an 0.88 ERA. Yanez is 6-3 with a 1.87 ERA.

Yanez is sticking with what has helped him pick up two playoff victories, using country music to relax him and his teammates before games. He usually sings and dances to Luke Bryan’s “Play It Again.” It’s doubtful he’ll get his favorite song playing at Dodger Stadium, so he’s coming prepared.

“Of course, everyone will be nervous,” he said. “But I just have to do my job and get everyone’s nerves off the game so we can have fun. I’m bringing a speaker and will blast it all the way there.”

The Southern Section Division 2 final on Friday at Dodger Stadium between Etiwanda and Palm Desert might produce a home run or two. Etiwanda has hit 29 home runs this season. Palm Desert has Jeremiah Estrada, who has hit three-run home runs in each of the last two playoff games.

This weekend’s softball championsh­ip games in Irvine feature a Division 1 final at 6:30 p.m. Saturday between two of the top teams in the nation. Norco is 33-0. Los Alamitos is 27-3.

Naomi Hernandez of Norco has 12 hits in 13 at-bats during the playoffs.

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? JAKE JACKSON (9), a catcher last season, has become the best pitcher in Southern California.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times JAKE JACKSON (9), a catcher last season, has become the best pitcher in Southern California.

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