Mr. Patient: JJ Saffie is ready for Dodger Stadium moment
On the eve of the City Section championship baseball game at Dodger Stadium, letβs explore a sometimes forgotten character trait: Patience.
When JJ Saffie walks onto hallowed ground Saturday as a starting left fielder for 10-time City champion El Camino Real High in the Open Division championship game against Birmingham, he will be finishing a journey few want to travel these days.
He spent three years on the junior varsity team waiting and grinding before getting his chance to start on varsity this season.
βVery patient,β he said. βFreshman year, played frosh-soph, called up for a few JV games. Sophomore year, on and off starter on JVs. Junior year is when it started clicking for me. I found my bat, I found the style I like to play, I started hitting real good.β
He was part of an outstanding JV team his junior year, called up as a pinch runner for the playoffs. He developed power and a knack for hitting balls over El Camino Realβs left-field fence during batting practice.
βIβve hit two windows and six cars,β said the 18-year-old, who likes to cause mayhem for insurance companies.
El Camino Real celebrates a 4-3 win over Granada Hills to earn a trip to Dodger Stadium on Saturday.
(Craig Weston)
Heβs hit two home runs this season and become a key player for the Royals.
Now he gets to start at Dodger Stadium, a moment every high school baseball player in the City Section dreams of reaching. Heβs batting .409, tops on his team.
βIβm a big believer in good things will come to those who are patient,β he said. βI knew I needed to be patient, work on my game and eventually success would come my way and Iβd have my opportunities and hereβs my opportunity. Iβm trying to prove that Saturday.β
El Camino Real needed a two-run single by RJ De La Rosa in the bottom of the sixth inning on Wednesday to defeat Granada Hills 4-3 in the semifinals at Cal State Northridge.
βI saw my pitch,β De La Rosa said. βI wanted to take advantage. It was the bottom of the sixth. The team needed me most and I pulled through. It was an amazing moment. These boys are my brothers. I will fight for them. I will do everything for them. I canβt wait to make some memories at Dodger Stadium.β
For Saffie, staying and fighting to get better rather than running away from a challenge is a great lesson for others.
JJ Saffie of El Camino Real has emerged as one of the teamβs best hitters after three years on the JV team. He leads the team with a .409 average.
(Craig Weston)
βI had a few people tell me to transfer,β he said. βBut my sister came here, my dad. I want to prove myself at this school.β
Top-seeded Birmingham will have junior Nathan Soto starting on the mound in the 1 p.m. game. Itβs a big assignment and heβll be working on his mental part of the game.
βItβs just another game,β he said after the Patriotsβ 4-1 semifinal win over Carson. βI think itβs everyoneβs dream to pitch there, but you have to keep it as a normal game.β
Pitcher Carlos Acuna grinded out a complete game in Birminghamβs 4-1 win over Carson to send the Patriots to Dodger Stadium.
(Craig Weston)
Birmingham can thank Carlos Acuna for putting together a sophomore season to remember. His pitching season is done. He finished with an 11-0 record after a complete-game win against Carson.
βItβs an amazing season heβs having,β coach Matt Mowry said.
In six of the seven innings on Wednesday, Carson got the leadoff batter aboard, forcing Acuna to work extra hard while throwing 102 pitches.
βHe was on the edge of coming out,β Mowry said.
Acuna wouldnβt let him.
βI love this team,β Acuna said. βI want to play one last game.β
Heβll start on Saturday at second or third base in a game matching two of the most successful programs in City baseball history. El Camino Real is seeking a record 11th title. Birmingham wants its ninth title.
The 10 a.m. game at Dodger Stadium has Verdugo Hills taking on Taft in the Division I final.
Fans will come for the sun, the hot dogs, the fun of cheering on someone they know or enjoying a moment of distraction at Los Angelesβ most sacred stadium.
Just remember those are teenagers out there whoβve sacrificed and spent years working toward this moment. Thereβs no losers when you get to play at Dodger Stadium as a high school kid.
For Saffie, it validates his belief in trusting the process and trusting himself. He didnβt run when the going got tough. He persevered and learned a valuable lesson: patience still pays off.