Tars believe Mission accomplished
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Bryce Alderton
The Newport Harbor High football team’s defensive unit began Friday’s
preseason scrimmage at highly-touted Mission Viejo on its heels. But
by the end of the 1-hour, 45-minute practice session, the Sailors
proved they could hold their ground.
The Sailors, missing two of their linebackers due to health
problems, allowed an opening-drive touchdown to Mission Viejo, which
had won 41-straight games before losing last season’s CIF Southern
Section Division II title game. But the visitors tightened their grip
after that, giving up just two scores, both on short-yardage
situations in the controlled format.
The gritty defense, along with an offense that found the end zone
once, gave Newport Coach Jeff Brinkley some positives heading into
the team’s opener at 7 p.m. Thursday against Fountain Valley at
Huntington Beach High.
Newport senior quarterback Kasey Peters completed 9 of 20 passes,
including four of his first five, for 93 yards with one touchdown and
no interceptions. Peters’ 3-yard TD toss to junior tailback Ryan
Rippon accounted for the Sailors’ score.
Senior Alex Orth led the Tars’ receiving corps with four catches
for 43 yards while tight end Greg Miner tallied 31 yards on two
catches. Burly senior fullback Trevor Theriot caught three passes for
27 yards.
Senior wideout Spencer Link, last season’s Newport-Mesa Player of
the Year, was held out due to a sore shoulder.
Brinkley was impressed with Peters’ recognition.
“[Peters] started checking out when [the Diablos] were packed in
there,” Brinkley said. “He played well to get out of a few bad
plays.”
With Newport in its offensive set during the situational
third-and-eight portion of the scrimmage, Peters, ducked to avoid a
potential sack, took two steps and connected with Orth, running a
crossing pattern, for a 20-yard pickup.
Orth, playing safety, also dealt one of the more ferocious blows
of the scrimmage when he jarred the ball loose from a Mission Viejo
receiver cutting across the middle to cap the hosts’ initial 10-play
sequence.
Each team ran 50 plays on both offense and defense, which included
goal-line sequences and starts from the 20- and 10-yard lines. Each
team also had 16 plays devoted to kickoffs and punts.
Newport’s defense held the Diablos to 82 yards rushing on 21
carries while Mission Viejo senior quarterback Mark Sanchez, who
completed 75% of his passes last fall and is bound for USC, was 6 of
9 for 62 yards with no touchdowns or interceptions.
Sophomore tailback Jasen Ruiz led the Tars with 34 yards on seven
carries.
James Coder saved a touchdown when he leaped in front of Mission
Viejo receiver Konrad Reuland to knock away a Sanchez pass near the
goal line.
Newport’s linebackers, considered by Brinkley to be one of the
team’s strengths entering the season, made their presence known with
Theriot, Miner and Rippon making several tackles, even though two
were playing slightly out of position. Rippon is normally a safety
while Theriot usually plays on the outside. Theriot had to move to
the middle with the absence of Taylor Young and Thomas Martin.
Young is still recovering from a broken ankle while Martin had
stomach problems, Newport defensive coordinator Tony Ciarelli said.
Despite their absences, Ciarelli believed Newport’s defense
improved following the Diablos’ 70-yard touchdown march on the
opening series.
“With a team like [Mission Viejo] or Fountain Valley, you can’t
let them get on top,” Ciarelli said. “You have to plant that seed of
doubt [with the opposing offense] that they could move the ball. That
comes from the first impact on the field.
“The kids realized this was a practice, going full-speed with [the
Diablos]. We kept them out of the end zone, for the most part, and
didn’t give up any long touchdowns, which is a plus. When at full
strength, we have a great defense.”
Brinkley said the Tars will need to work on moving quicker off the
ball, but felt that his team accomplished much in the scrimmage.
“We need to knock people backward,” Brinkley said. “[The Diablos]
ran inside for 8 or 9 yards, so I would like to get that stopped.
“[The scrimmage] gives us a lot of situations and looks we will
face on game night. It gives us something to work on and film to
evaluate to help us decide who to play where starting Thursday
night.”
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