Prep column: End comes suddenly for Tars
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Barry Faulkner
The Newport Harbor High football team had a long bus ride back to
campus Saturday night, and all of Sunday, to absorb the finality of a
season-ending 13-10 overtime loss at La Mirada in the CIF Southern
Section Division VI semifinals.
For others, the lack of a practice to attend Monday brought more
painful resolution that this season, for most seniors their last in the
sport, is but a memory.
The disappointment and surprise, however, are not limited to those who
shed tears in the Sailors’ locker room Saturday night. For, this team,
this program, seems now to annually galvanize a community, a great many
of whose citizens had planned on attending Friday’s championship game,
just as they had the last two seasons and five of the last nine.
That there is no 14th week this fall is indeed a concession to
reality, to the uncompromising difficulty of attaining excellence so
consistently. So good have the Sailors become, the expectations so lofty,
the totality of that excellence is regrettably diminished when a CIF
title, or at least playing for one, is not attained. This should not be
so. Having earned 34 wins the last three seasons, a school record, those
who bleed Newport blue have clearly been spoiled.
Arguably, the same is true at La Mirada, a program which has virtually
mirrored Newport Harbor’s success in recent years.
But it was the Matadores, then-unbeaten and top-seeded, who were
forced to deal with the devastation of coming so close to a championship
goal last season, only to lose in the semis, 35-16, at Newport Harbor.
Perhaps that loss, and the perspective that it presented, could help
explain the rampant joy displayed by La Mirada spectators and players
alike, when two Jared Martin field goals -- the first to tie the game
with two seconds left in regulation and the second to win the game in
overtime -- sailed through the uprights and into a proud program’s lore.
Though it may be awhile before the sting of Saturday’s loss, the
Sailors should eventually celebrate the 10-2-1 campaign that was rife
with glory.
Among the memories that come to mind:
*Countless deftly thrown Morgan Craig passes, 23 of which resulted in
touchdowns.
*The brutish ease with which offensive tackle Robert Chai knocked
about his opponents.
*The seamless simplicity of an Adam Kerns fly pattern and the
surprising force which he delivered making a tackle.
*The power and grace of Brian Gaeta intersecting the ball at its
highest point.
*The tenacity of a Cory Ray tackle.
*The play-after-play passion of defensive end Jim Rothwell.
*The unsung efficiency of receiver-safety Mike McDonald, on both sides
of the ball.
*The concussion of a Dave Erickson kick-out block.
*Two-way lineman Bryan Breland separating a ball carrier from the
ball.
*Outside linebacker Tyler Miller sniffing out a flat pass and closing
quickly to either break it up or nail the receiver in his tracks.
*Dartangan Johnson darting through would-be tacklers en route to big
rushing numbers.
*Nose guard Joe Foley making plays despite a debilitating ankle
injury.
*Defensive tackle Scott Kohan knocking a blocker backward, allowing
him to record a tackle without touching the ball carrier.
*Nick Iverson’s consistent kick coverage.
*Craig finishing a run.
*The throwback “Nebraska pass” for a touchdown against Cerritos.
Hopefully, the wait for another gadget play won’t be as long as the one
that preceded this one.
There should be no noticeable drop-off next season for the Sailors,
who won Sea View League titles on the freshman and junior varsity levels
this fall.
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