OCC football: Higgs knew it all along
Steve Virgen
The scoreboard couldn’t bring him down -- El Camino 30, Orange
Coast 0 -- Nick Higgs never sunk his head. The Orange Coast College
freshman quarterback didn’t even mope, much less dwell in the frustration
of an offense that had scored just one touchdown in three weeks.
With his pass-happy dreams turning into nightmares, Higgs remained
patient and clung to the one thing that has maintained his love for the
game: confidence.
He believed in himself and he trusted his teammates could do better
and the results came through the week after the shutout.
The Pirates stunned Mt. San Antonio and then the following week OCC
pulled another upset at Pasadena City, which led to Higgs’ selection for
Orange Coast’s Athlete of the Week honors.
“Confidence, that’s the main thing,” Higgs said of the team’s
turnaround. “That’s all it is...confidence.”
Higgs acquired confidence and perseverance while playing for Sultana
High in Hesperia. Last year he suffered a deep thigh bruise that
shortened his season. Yet Higgs overcame the injury and threw for 1,500
yards in six games.
This year he began the season as a backup to Justin Simons in the
opener against Riverside. He played sparingly and finished with 17 yards
and one interception, completing 5 of his 9 attempts.
The next game at Long Beach, Higgs started, but didn’t improve much.
He led the Pirates to their first touchdown of the season, but threw for
only 70 yards on 6-of-26 passing with another interception.
And then came El Camino and the shutout. But he never worried. Higgs
and the Pirates went into the land of the nation’s No. 4-ranked team, Mt.
San Antonio, the next week and shocked the junior college football world
with a 26-25 upset win.
As if that wasn’t enough, OCC pulled another shocker at Pasadena nine
nights ago as Higgs had his best game of the season. He passed for 283
yards and two touchdowns, both to Justin Dale, Higgs’ high school
teammate in 1998.
“What I saw in him the past two games is what I’ve known about Nick my
whole life,” Dale said. “Those first three games he wasn’t playing like
the Nick Higgs I knew. I knew if the coaches just gave him another chance
he would show himself.”
Higgs has improved because he has kept in mind his high school years.
Throughout his stay at Sultana, Higgs learned not only to believe in
himself, but to also place trust in his teammates, one being Dale, OCC’s
big-play wide receiver, who is one of many reasons Higgs came to play for
the Pirates.
The Orange Coast connection of Higgs-to-Dale began at Sultana in 1998.
When Dale played for OCC last year Higgs went to see his best friend
play. Higgs saw an offense he would like to play in with Jared Flint
flinging passes downfield.
The following year, Higgs decided to join Dale. And now that the two
are becoming comfortable with the offense, Higgs is finding Dale quicker
than ever.
“I know where (Dale) is going to be because I played with him,” said
Higgs, who believes he is growing comfortable with the offense and the
team day by day. “Our offense is doing better because we’re trusting each
other.”
As the Bucs enter Mission Conference Central Division play, Higgs is
satisfied with his decision to play for OCC. He, as most JC football
players, came here to move on to the next level. But, Higgs also came
because he didn’t want to stop playing. And when his career is over at
OCC, he hopes to continue it elsewhere.
“To play at this level, you just don’t play just to play,” Higgs said.
“You play because you love the game and you want to get to the next
level. I don’t care where I play next. I just want to keep playing.”
And it continues Saturday on the Pirates’ campus, with Golden West
College invading for a 7 p.m. collision.
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