Los Angeles Times

A five-tool softball star who makes it all look easy

Whittier Christian’s Garcia hopes to lead school to Southern Section title.

- By Steve Galluzzo

Aleena Garcia makes everything look easy on and off the diamond. In a way it is, but only because she has dedicated so much time and effort to the three things she values most: family, faith and softball.

A senior shortstop at Whittier Christian High in La Habra, Garcia leads her team in practicall­y every offensive category, and her 12 home runs rank No. 12 in the state and 10th in the Southern Section. She is third in the state in runs scored (49) and boasts a .692 slugging percentage, a .610 batting average, 50 hits, 17 doubles, three triples, 33 RBIs and five stolen bases.

A typical 24-hour period begins with a 5 a.m. run, after which she spends 30 minutes writing in her journal or reading the Bible before getting ready for school. She has classes from 8 a.m. to 1:40 p.m., then high school practice for an additional 21⁄2 hours. Before getting home for dinner, she’ll fit in an extra workout on her own until dark. Fortunatel­y, she never gets tired of the routine.

“I started baseball at the age of 3 and when I was 6, I went right into travel ball,” she said. “My dad was also my coach, which I’m happy about. Between the ages of 8 and 10, I won three national championsh­ips, which everybody doesn’t get to do, and from then to now I transition­ed into travel softball at the highest level.

“It’s a bit ironic that in baseball I always played outfield, but playing with boys growing up helped me become a better player faster and it also helped me competitiv­e-wise because boys are very competitiv­e from the day they’re born.”

Garcia tried shortstop for the first time when she went to her first softball tryout, and she has played the position ever since.

“I love it,” she said. “You’re moving the most. I get to use my athletic ability there.”

Of all the instructio­n and advice she has absorbed along the way, though, her father, Rudy, has had the most inf luence.

“He’s been a huge part of my success and my journey in this sport,” Garcia said. “Since the day I started playing sports, he’s pushed me to be my best, but he also knows who I am as a person. He’s helped me become a better person and player.”

Living with two brothers, one older and one younger, also accelerate­d Garcia’s personal and athletic growth.

“It’s a blessing,” she says. “Not everyone has brothers who compete at a high level.

“My older brother, Andy, played baseball when he was younger and he may not know it, but I’d always try to be as good as him and be like him. My little brother, Aaron, was out there running around since he was in diapers. Now we train together all the time and it’s competitio­n every day.”

Andy attended La Serna High and played baseball until he was 11 before switching to golf. He is now a sophomore on the the men’s team at Cal State Dominguez Hills. Aaron, meanwhile, follows in his sister’s footsteps as a shortstop and catcher.

“We train together all the time; we’re never without each other,” said Aaron, who is completing eighth grade and eager to start his own high school career at St. John Bosco in the fall. “We push each other and make each other better.”

Garcia spent her freshman year during the pandemic honing her skills at EM Speed and Power, a training facility in Rancho Cucamonga specializi­ng in high-intensity, full-body workouts. When the pandemic eased, she enrolled at Whittier Christian, a school with 428 students about 10 miles from her home in Pico Rivera.

“A huge reason I came here was my faith,” she said. “We’re not ashamed to talk about God and we’re allowed to, so being here helps me grow in that aspect of my life as well.”

Dale Van Duyn is in his 18th season at Whittier Christian and believes Garcia is the most complete player he has ever coached.

“All around, definitely,” he said without hesitation. “She can hit, catch, throw, play defense, run the bases … she’s the whole package. Usually when you have a really good player, they have an attitude to them and even though she’s very competitiv­e, she’s also a phenomenal teammate. She leads by her actions.”

Van Duyn is quick to point out that for all of her God-given talent, Garcia’s success can be attributed to hours and hours of repetition.

“She works on her swing constantly; she takes a minimum 200 swings a day,” added Van Duyn, who piloted the Heralds to backto-back Southern Section Division 5 titles in 2009 and 2010. “She works on every aspect of her game, not just hitting. Actually, she’s improved her base running the most. She’s not only the fastest I’ve had, she’s also the smartest. I have no doubt she’ll succeed at the next level. If she struggles, she’ll work herself out of it.”

Despite being a power hitter, Garcia is not one to swing at offerings outside the zone. She is a pitcher’s worst nightmare in that she will work the count, take a walk if there is nothing to attack, and pounce on any mistake. She has struck out only once in 82 at-bats this season.

“One key to hitting is to work on it all the time,” she said. “It’s no secret … the more you hit in practice, the better you’ll hit in games. Another key is the mind-set, which not many people think of. A hitting mind-set is so important because you’re going to fail a lot in this sport. It’s a game of failure. If you’re failing you don’t want to get too low, if you’re succeeding you don’t want to get too high. Keep the mind-set that you know you’re good enough to beat anybody and you know you’ve succeeded before so every time up you believe you can do it.”

On March 15, Garcia hit three homers and batted in six runs versus Mary Star, and in the Heralds’ last game she went three for three with a double, a triple, one RBI and two runs scored in a 13-2 rout of Los Altos. For all of her hitting prowess, she has also been stellar on defense, posting a .925 fielding percentage with 22 putouts, 40 assists, two double plays and only five errors in 67 total chances.

Stats like those will draw the attention of any Division I program and, sure enough, when Sept. 1 rolled around, Garcia received 15 offers, according to her dad, including from Oregon, Stanford and Texas A&M. Although Rudy was hoping she would pick Stanford, Aleena opted for UCLA and cited several reasons:

“First, it just felt like home when I was there,” she said. “I felt at peace with the coaches and the players in a way that was different than the other places I visited. Second, it’s one of the winningest programs. I could be there next year and right away be competing for the national championsh­ip . ... Third, it’s close to home. I love my family and being that close it’ll be easier for them to come see me play than if I went somewhere else. Fourth, softball is not forever. I see myself being an Olympian, psychology interests me too, and L.A. has lots of connection­s.”

Garcia cannot wait for the day she gets to don the powder blue uniform.

“Committing to UCLA was the best moment of my life because that’s been a dream of mine since I started playing softball,” she said.

“I could see myself living with them every day for four years there and continuing that relationsh­ip after college,” she addsed “The way they push each other, their competitiv­eness, how they compete in everything they do … it’s a place I want to be.”

Garcia wants nothing more than to cap her prep career with one of the only things she still has not achieved on the diamond: a CIF championsh­ip. In her sophomore year the Heralds lost to La Mirada in the first round in Division 1, and last year they made the Division 2 quarterfin­als, losing to Grand Terrace despite a Garcia homer.

“This year we have a very strong team with a lot of young players who came in and have really developed,” Garcia said.

“But we older girls are still here to lead, we all have a great relationsh­ip with each other, so I think we can win the title this year.”

 ?? Steve Galluzzo For The Times ?? ALEENA GARCIA, a senior shortstop at Whittier Christian High in La Habra, has committed to UCLA.
Steve Galluzzo For The Times ALEENA GARCIA, a senior shortstop at Whittier Christian High in La Habra, has committed to UCLA.

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