Prep football: Rarefied air
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Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - As the victories mount and the championship banners
multiply, a team’s ability to earn its own niche in Newport Harbor High
football history is becoming increasingly difficult.
The 2001 Sailors, however, put themselves in position to be part of
something unparalleled in the program’s 71 varsity seasons when they
rolled over Woodbridge, 34-7, Friday to clinch the Sea View League
championship.
The win improved Coach Jeff Brinkley’s Tars to 8-0-1, 4-0 in league,
upping the program’s victory total the last three seasons to 32.
Following a 13-0-1 year in 1999 and last season’s 11-3 mark, this year’s
squad can establish a school record for victories in three consecutive
seasons with its next triumph.
The 1992-94 teams went a combined 32-6, while the current three-year
roll is now 32-3-2, heading into Friday’s nonleague date against visiting
Westchester to conclude the regular season.
The victory over Woodbridge also placed this year’s team into an elite
club of six outright league champions at Newport Harbor. Only nine
previous Sailor battalions had been able to call themselves league
champions and this becomes only the third league crown during Brinkley’s
watershed 16 seasons at the helm.
“We’ve averaged more than 10 wins a year the last three,” said
Brinkley, whose team tied the three-year record in somewhat atypical
fashion.
With Woodbridge’s shifting 46 defense limiting the Harbor ground game
to 81 rushing yards, senior quarterback Morgan Craig feasted on man
coverage by the Warrior secondary.
“That’s kind of the beauty of the offense,” Brinkley, the Tars’
offensive architect, said. “If we’re functioning well within the system,
it’s tough to take everything away. We’ve had real good balance this year
and we try to feature the abilities of our athletes. (The Warriors) move
around a lot and pack it in, and when they pack it in, they play man
coverage outside. And Morgan threw the deep ball very well.
Craig connected with senior speedster Adam Kerns for touchdown bombs
of 79 and 46 yards, and also hit him on a beautifully thrown 43-yard
pickup that led to the Sailors fourth touchdown, midway through the third
quarter.
Craig completed 10 of 14 for 215 yards and three TDs and finished the
four-game Sea View slate 40 of 55 (72.7%) for 561 yards and seven TDs. He
is 86 for 124 (69.4%) for 1,132 yards and 17 TDs for the season, with
only two interceptions.
But for a 16-play, 53-yard touchdown drive against the Newport
reserves, capped by a 13-yard scoring pass with 21 seconds left,
Newport’s defense, which leads Orange County in fewest points allowed
(54), would have become only the 11th team in school history to record at
least four shutouts. Teams are averaging six points per game against
Harbor this fall.
Still, the unit, which has only one returning starter from last year’s
CIF Southern Section Division VI runner-up, has now allowed the fewest
points through nine games of any Harbor team after World War II. The 1971
squad surrendered 60 points in its nine-game regular season and did not
advance to the playoffs.
The 1935 Sailors set the ultimate standard for defense, allowing just
33 points in eight contests, an average of just more than four per game.
The 1942 Tars, who lost to Bonita, 39-6, in the CIF lower-division
title game, posted a school single-season record six shutouts in 10
games, in which they allowed 65 points.
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