Los Angeles Times

Walk the walk, talk the talk

Hart High catcher’s savvy and enthusiasm rub off on teammates and even opponents.

- ERIC SONDHEIMER ON HIGH SCHOOLS

Hart High’s catcher Matt Quintanar looks destined to play baseball for a long time.

Matt Quintanar of Newhall Hart High is a 17-yearold junior destined to play baseball for as long as he wants. He loves sweating, spitting and getting dirty behind home plate playing catcher.

If he isn’t calling the umpire by his first name by the game’s conclusion, it surely won’t be his fault because he’s a nonstop talker with the kind of enthusiasm and personalit­y that’s noticed by opposing players.

When Blake Schroeder of Santa Clarita rival West Ranch walked into the batter’s box last week, he was greeted by a handshake from Quintanar. What catcher shakes hands with a rival before the biggest game of the year?

“That’s Matt,” said Schroeder, who played summer ball with Quintanar. “That’s all him. He just talks a lot. It’s his life.”

In the dugout, when he’s not hitting, the 6-foot, 180pound Quintanar is shouting encouragem­ent and offering advice to teammates. It’s as if he’s an unofficial

cheerleade­r and assistant coach.

When pitcher Jake Villar, who had given up no hits, threw three consecutiv­e balls in the fourth inning, Quintanar called timeout, removed his catcher’s mask and walked to the mound to have a short conversati­on with his pitcher. You’d think he’d give him a little pep talk, pat him on the back, tell him everything was going to be fine. Not quite.

“It was a lot of tough love,” Villar said. “He said, ‘Pick it up. What are you doing?’ He’s a big guy, so you want to be nice to him.”

Quintanar went back

behind the plate and shouted for everyone to hear, “Come on baby, so what?”

Villar proceeded to throw consecutiv­e strikes before getting the batter to fly out.

Quintanar deployed the correct strategy, knowing his pitcher’s personalit­y. “I told him to figure it out. He had been having a great day. Others I have to be a little softer,” he said.

Said Hart coach Jim Ozella: “He’s very savvy about the game. He knows the background of the game, he studies it, he watches it. He knows how to improve himself and the people around him. There’s a time he’s a coach on the field and it’s a great thing. You let him do his thing. Sometimes in today’s world that might rub some players the wrong way, but it comes down to he wants his team to be successful.”

Quintanar, who committed to Pepperdine, has struck out just twice all season. He’s batting .521. He takes every at-bat seriously, then moves on. It’s the only way to be successful in baseball, where perfection is the goal but never achieved. Short-term memory is a requiremen­t because moving on to the next at-bat, the next throw, the next decisive moment can be immediate.

“I’m catching the ball every pitch, so if I mess up, I’ll mess up the entire game,” he said.

There are times Ozella has had to tone down Quintanar’s enthusiasm in an attempt to keep him healthy.

“He hit the ball to leftcenter field and we’re up 12-0 and he comes flying around second and slides head first into third,” Ozella said. “I told him, ‘That’s great but we’re up 12-0. I don’t want you getting hurt sliding head first. You’re going to learn when you’re playing in college and pro ball, there are times for the health of the team and your health.’ He looked at me like I’m crazy. I’d rather have to tone a kid down than pick him up. He’s old school.”

Quintanar loves catching.

“I love to control the game,” he said. “Everything is in front of me. I can see everything,”

Quintanar loves baseball.

“My first memory was T-ball,” he said. “I remember pointing up like Babe Ruth and hitting a home run.”

Ozella, who has coached numerous future pro players at Hart, including Trevor Bauer, said Quintanar is someone we’ll be hearing about and watching for years to come.

“The brain is at a different level than a lot of other players,” he said. “That’s a determinin­g factor down the road. He’ll find a way.”

At the end of Hart’s 2-0 victory over West Ranch, there was drama. Massimo Vega came in with the bases loaded and got consecutiv­e strikeouts to secure the win. As Vega and teammates celebrated the final strikeout, Quintanar turned and shook hands with the umpire instead of joining the celebratio­n.

“That’s Carl,” Quintanar said. “I’ve had him a couple games. He went to Pepperdine and majored in business.”

Yes, he knows everything about the umpire at game conclusion. Call it smart, call it savvy, call it a teenager with a bright future.

 ?? Eric Sondheimer Los Angeles Times ?? MATT QUINTANAR, waiting to hit in the on-deck area, enjoys controllin­g the action as Hart’s catcher.
Eric Sondheimer Los Angeles Times MATT QUINTANAR, waiting to hit in the on-deck area, enjoys controllin­g the action as Hart’s catcher.

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