Football blends community spirit
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RICHARD DUNN
What is Coastal Football? That, of course, depends on how you choose
to define the small, two-letter word made famous by our 42nd
president of the United States.
In this case, all one needs to imagine is a drive up Pacific Coast
Highway on a warm summer twilight, from the southern tip of Laguna
Beach to the northern reaches of Huntington Beach. You could spend a
week making stops along the way at art galleries, shopping centers
and museums, while exploring the nook and crannies of the sand and
piers and sometimes rocky shoreline of this great Orange County
coastal stretch.
Not far off PCH are the high schools and community colleges in the
circulation of the Daily Pilot and its weekly sister papers, the
Huntington Beach Independent and Laguna Beach Coastline Pilot. Aha.
Now you’re getting the picture. The combined effort of all three
newspapers has shaped the inaugural Coastal Football Preview.
Presto. Welcome to the 2003 version. Our first as a unit. We hope
you enjoy the pages as much as we love covering high school and
community college football in our newsroom.
You see, the start of football season is much more than 11 guys
lining up on each side of the ball with 100 yards of countable real
estate on which to perform, deemed as a school’s battleground for an
evening.
This is about community and school spirit. It’s everybody pulling
on the same rope. Countless boosters volunteer to work in the snack
bars and ticket booths. Cheerleaders and band members, song leaders
and flag twirlers, all refine their skills prior to the opening
kickoff.
Oh, sure, fans come to watch their favorite team or an intriguing
game or simply to support their alma mater or local school. But let’s
face it. When you show at Newport Harbor High and the home side is
packed and the aroma of the barbecue is everywhere and the Sailors’
marching band is blaring its famous version of “Anchors Aweigh,” it’s
an experience. It’s not just a football game. It’s an event.
Go to just about any stadium on a Friday night and you’ll see a
community pulling together, bonding as at no other time.
And, from a Coastal Football Preview perspective, one thing the
high schools all have in common along this golden coast is the just
that -- beaches and sand, sunsets and cool ocean breezes. It’s rarely
muggy enough to sweat. You usually don’t break out the sweaters until
some time in October. Sportswriters are lucky if they sit in the
press box. The autumn climate is usually comfortable throughout the
campaign and jackets are not required.
My first experience covering high school football games began in
the fall of 1981 as a Daily Pilot stringer. In that time, the Pilot
was still in South County, covering San Clemente and Dana Hills,
Mission Viejo and Capistrano Valley.
I remember covering Todd Marinovich in the mid-1980s when he
played for the Cougars, on his way to setting the national high
school record for career passing yards.
I remember covering quarterback Bret Johnson at El Toro, then his
younger brother, Rob, who played wide receiver as a junior, because
the Chargers had Steve Stemstrom at quarterback. Rob Johnson was also
an excellent three-pointer shooter in basketball and pro baseball
prospect as a pitcher.
As we entered the 1990s, the Daily Pilot turned to covering only
Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. We started doing more with Estancia,
Costa Mesa, Corona del Mar and Newport Harbor than ever before. In
fact, when Harbor and CdM would play, and Estancia and Mesa, we
played up those games like the Super Bowl.
Amazingly, in 1992, there was the Battle of the Bay II, when
Newport Harbor and Corona del Mar clashed in the CIF Southern Section
Division IV semifinals at Davidson Field, perhaps the greatest single
high school football game in Newport-Mesa history.
I’ve covered football games at every stadium in Orange County, and
then some, and always looked forward to each opportunity to cover a
game and bang out the story on deadline.
It’s a different era now. Schools like Tesoro are popping up.
Northwood intends to become a CIF superpower. Ocean View has its own
stadium.
Finally, as boosters fill lunch requests during football
two-a-days and band members attend band camp in anticipation of this
week’s openers, we have been hard at work at the Daily Pilot. It has
been more than a decade since the last Daily Pilot-generated football
special section and I can clearly remember those long days in late
August and early September.
One year, in preparation for football season, all the
sportswriters here shaved their heads. Another time, we lost weight
as a staff in a fund-raising campaign, which concluded as the
football season was starting. There is indeed something special about
this time of year. If sport mirrors life, then football seems to
imitate society’s greatest passion for togetherness.
Enjoy the season.
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