Season Interrupted: Aly Kaneshiro gets the college she wants, not the finish
- Share via
Throughout the spring, The Times will interview high school seniors whose athletic careers were cut short by the coronavirus outbreak.
Name: Aly Kaneshiro
School: Santa Clarita Hart
Sport: Softball, catcher
Key stats: Batted .514 with three home runs and 10 RBIs for 9-2 Hart
Summer plans: Will play travel ball
Fall plans: Will attend Stanford
On dealing with a canceled season:
“It’s not easy. I love my team. I think we would have had a special year. There’s a 1,000 ways our season could have been cut short but we never expected it to be this. It was shocking. It was upsetting.”
On changing her college choice:
“I was originally committed to UC Davis as a sophomore. I continued to work hard to see where it took me. Everything happens for a reason. Stanford came around, and it’s always been my dream school.”
How she practices:
“You got to work with what you got. Fortunately I have both my brothers home. Both played baseball. I play catch with them or my dad.”
Are her brothers throwing hard enough:
“Surprisingly they’re able to keep up.”
The creative things she’s doing with her free time:
“I’m trying to do a 2,000-piece puzzle. It’s a very slow pace. I’ve also discovered I can somewhat draw. I’ve been binge-watching my Netflix.”
What she misses most:
“The atmosphere, the camaraderie, the competition. It’s all what makes the sport so great.”
Norco softball standout Sarah Willis ponders what comes next while dealing with the coronavirus outbreak: “It’s about being in the real world now.”
The lessons she’s learned:
“I learned never take anything for granted. You don’t realize exactly what you have until it’s gone. I took a lot of things for granted.”
Where she sees herself in 10 years:
“I hope to have a family, having a job where I can help other people. I want to go into the medical field.”
Video interviews of each athlete can be found at latimes.com/sports/highschool.
More to Read
Get our high school sports newsletter
Prep Rally is devoted to the SoCal high school sports experience, bringing you scores, stories and a behind-the-scenes look at what makes prep sports so popular.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.