The Arizona Republic

FLIGHT PATHS

Basha sisters have state title hopes in track, softball

- Richard Obert

category against sophomores and juniors.

Last March, Gabriella had the nation’s top high school female javelin throw at 163 feet, 1 inch at the Arizona Open. That came a year after finishing second in the state as a freshman in the javelin.

Playing shortstop like her mom did, she is hitting .435 with 10 hits and five RBI during Basha’s 6-1 start. She played for her mom as a freshman at Basha, hitting .383 with two home runs. Kara Brun-Garcia stepped down as Basha’s softball coach after Gabriella’s freshman season, because she didn’t want to miss out on younger daughter J.J.’s track events during her first year in high school. She could also just play mom at Gabriella’s softball games.

This week, after coming home from their practices, Gabriella went outside to the batting cage on her own to get some extra cuts, and J.J. worked on some strength drills with her dad.

“They are both walking champions. Gabby already won one . ... J.J. is in hot pursuit of that. She

will be a state champion before she’s done with

high school.”

They have great role models at home. Their father Jason Garcia has a blue collar background. Their mother Kara BrunGarcia has a Hall of Fame background, making headlines in softball at Arizona State.

They taught daughters Gabriella and Juliana the virtues of hard work. But they never pushed them. They didn’t have to. They want excellence in their lives, and they’ve found their own paths to get there.

This spring, Gabriella, a junior, who already has committed to play softball at Oklahoma, is playing shortstop on Basha’s 6-1 softball team, while getting in her javelin throws to try to defend her Division I state championsh­ip. Meanwhile, Juliana, better known as J.J., is working on the discus and shot put in pursuit of Division I state track and field titles in those events in May. She got fourth in the state in the discus and shot last year as a freshman and placed fourth in the discus at nationals in the emerging elite

Marcus Brunson

Basha track coach on the

Garcia sisters

“I always worried in softball, it’s known, people know that I’m Gabriella’s mom,” Brun-Garcia said. “She hears it more than I do from outsiders. They always say, ‘Are you playing because your mom’s making you?’ She always laughs and says, ‘No.’

“Me and my husband, we always tell our kids, ‘You go out there and compete because you enjoy it.’ I was a big advocate for both of my children that we don’t play sports for scholarshi­ps. You play sports because you love to compete, you love to have fun. And the scholarshi­p is the bonus. That’s just our household philosophy.”

Gabriella loves that her mom and dad can be there for both her and her sister at their events.

“We have a great supporting staff,” Gabriella said. “Our family is at all of our sporting events. We have family friends who show up. Our support staff is amazing.”

Gabriella said she feels some pressure

because of her mom’s softball accomplish­ments from Glendale Deer Valley High to ASU. But her mom does her best to keep the pressure off.

“There is that pressure, but she had her career and we’re just trying to identify our own careers for ourselves,” she said.

Basha track and field coach Marcus Brunson, a former state champion sprinter in high school at Tempe Marcos de Niza who went on to track fame at Arizona State, said it feels like “hitting the lottery” to have the Garcia sisters attend

Basha.

He’s able to balance the schedule of softball and the javelin with softball coach Kailey Pomeroy for Gabriella.

“They are both walking champions,” Brunson said. “Gabby already won one. ... J.J. is in hot pursuit of that. She will be a state champion before she’s done with high school.”

J.J. was a pretty good softball player at the age of 10. But shortly after that, her desire turned from softball to track and field, particular­ly the discus and shot. She tried the javelin a few years ago, but suffered a UCL injury in her elbow. The shot and discus, along with the hammer throw, which she will also pursue in college, have less wear and tear on the elbow.

“Track is so inviting,” J.J. said. “It’s a strong community.”

There is no sister-sister rivalry. One of the reasons Gabriella picked up the javelin was to be able to spend time with her younger sister during the spring track and field season, and they could watch each other throw.

“My goal in everything is to be very technicall­y sound,” Gabriella said. “I do a lot of drills, before I even pick up the javelin. I also do a lot of PT (physical therapy) training, like work on those individual muscles around the UCL and shoulder.”

The motion is a little different than softball but both rely on momentum throws. In the javelin, the athlete locks out the front knee and throws from behind.

“We’re each other’s biggest supporters,” J.J. said. “When she succeeds, I’m just happy for her. When I succeed, she’s the say way. We’re the sister duo in track.”

 ?? ROB SCHUMACHER/ THE REPUBLIC, ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MARC JENKINS/
USA TODAY NETWORK ?? Basha’s Gabriella Garcia, left, is the reigning Division I state javelin champ and a shortstop on the softball team while her sister J.J. is aiming for titles in shot put and discus.
ROB SCHUMACHER/ THE REPUBLIC, ILLUSTRATI­ON BY MARC JENKINS/ USA TODAY NETWORK Basha’s Gabriella Garcia, left, is the reigning Division I state javelin champ and a shortstop on the softball team while her sister J.J. is aiming for titles in shot put and discus.
 ?? ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY ROB SCHUMACHER/THE REPUBLIC ?? Basha’s Gabriella Garcia, left, is the reigning Division I state javelin champion and is a shortstop on the softball team. Her sister J.J. Garcia throws the shot put and discus.
PHOTOS BY ROB SCHUMACHER/THE REPUBLIC Basha’s Gabriella Garcia, left, is the reigning Division I state javelin champion and is a shortstop on the softball team. Her sister J.J. Garcia throws the shot put and discus.

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