Newport Harbor still plugging holes
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Rick Devereux
The injuries Coach Jeff Brinkley has had to overcome on the Newport
Harbor High football team would send some staffs looking for excuses.
The best wide receiver is out with a shoulder injury.
The projected starting tailback is out with ligament damage to his
knee.
The leading tackler on defense is sidelined with a stomach
ailment.
But Brinkley and the Sailors plug in another athlete and continue
to win.
Newport (2-0) beat Fountain Valley, 20-7, in the season opener and
Marina, 35-0, Friday, with various players stepping up to contribute.
Receiver Alex Orth grabbed a game-high eight catches for 85 yards and
a touchdown against the Barons. Junior James Coder hauled in six
passes for 88 yards and three scores against the Vikings and senior
fullback Trevor Theriot rushed for a career-high 153 yards and one
touchdown Friday.
“We have a system that we run that has reads for the quarterback
and he reads and throws to the guy who is open,” Brinkley said. “Last
week it was Alex, this week was James. We didn’t go in saying we
wanted to get James the ball.”
Brinkley said the team did not emphasize Theriot picking up more
carries, either, even though the 6-foot-1, 225-pounder lined up as a
tailback behind a blocking back.
“We try to take what [the defense] gives us,” Brinkley said. “I’ve
always believed that you’ve got to be able to run the ball in order
to win and you’ve got to be able to stop the run. But if a team gives
us a ratio that dictates pass, we’ll pass. It depends on what they
choose to stop.”
It appeared the Vikings wanted to stop the run because Marina was
stacking defenders close to the line of scrimmage. But senior
quarterback Kasey Peters made them pay for giving receivers room to
work, completing 11 of 18 attempts for 139 yards and three
touchdowns.
“I thought [Peters] played real well [against Marina],” Brinkley
said. “He had two bad luck interceptions in the first week, but,
overall, he has been playing really well. And the offensive line has
done a great job of protecting him.”
The Sailors, No. 2 in CIF Southern Section Division VI, will
attempt to keep things rolling when they meet crosstown rival Corona
del Mar in the Battle of the Bay, Thursday at Newport Harbor.
* CORONA DEL MAR: It looks as if the three-headed monster has been
cut in half when it comes to the Sea Kings ground game.
Last season, Wess Presson, Austin Brawner and Brett Crowley
combined for 1,343 rushing yards. The production was evenly
distributed between the three with Brawner (554 yards) holding a
slight edge over Presson (407) and Crowley (382).
This year, Presson has emerged as the main ballcarrier, rushing
for 525 yards and six touchdowns on 48 carries. The second-leading
rusher for the Sea Kings is quarterback Tom Welch, who has 240 yards
and four touchdowns on 29 carries.
Through the first three games last season, Austin Brawner was the
leading rusher with 232 yards and two TDs on 46 attempts. This
season, Brawner, used primarily as a blocking back, has 123 yards on
19 carries.
But offensive coordinator Tony Naranjo is obviously doing
something right since Corona del Mar (3-0) has outscored its
opponents by an average of 39-17. In Friday’s 44-28 victory over
Troy, the offense produced six gains of at least 20 yards, including
touchdowns of 57, 50 (rushing) and 27 (passing).
Presson had 107 rushing yards in the first quarter alone.
But the most critical points were the two touchdowns CdM scored in
the final 3:29 that sealed the victory.
Coach Dick Freeman, obviously impressed by his team’s
fourth-quarter stamina, said afterward his players should never again
complain about running sprints in practice.
The Sea Kings entered Friday’s win ranked No. 6 in CIF Division
IX.
* ESTANCIA: Coach Craig Fertig was surprised to learn the Eagles’
19-0 victory over Buena Park was the first shutout by an Eagles
defense since 2000, a span of 38 games.
“Oh?,” he said. “Well, I give all the credit to our defensive
coordinator, Dave Olsen. He does a great job at getting the kids to
believe in the game plan.”
Fertig said Olsen’s teaching background helps the defensive coach.
“He’s a history teacher and has really studied military history a
lot,” Fertig said. “In military history, you go in and study the
tendencies of what armies do on the battlefield. Dave studies what
the offense will do and its tendencies.”
Fertig said anticipating what Buena Park would run was a major
factor in the win.
“Olsen is a great strategy guy,” he said. “We would know what they
would do at certain times and then stunt or role our coverage to
defend it and it worked to perfection.”
But while a general can direct troop movements, it’s the actual
soldiers who decide the outcome of any battle.
“I liked our intensity on defense,” Fertig said. “When it came to
a crucial time, our players would come up and make plays. One of the
biggest improvements we’ve had is that we tackled better.”
Fertig said the play of linebacker Ryan Sanford, cornerback
Ezequiel Villalvazo and safety Ricky Montgomery have been impressive.
Sanford and Montgomery ended the game with a safety, simultaneously
taking down the quarterback in the end zone.
That was the third different quarterback to be hit by the Eagle
defense, with the first two getting knocked out of the game with
injuries. Tackle Nelson Leon blindsided the quarterback, who fell on
his throwing shoulder, and Montgomery had a similar play later in the
game.
“I’m an old quarterback, so I feel for those guys,” Fertig said.
“I went up to [their starting quarterback after the game], and he was
shaking hands with his left, but he told me he’d be OK.”
Fertig said he hopes the team will continue its stellar play and
cut back on unforced penalties.
“We keep shooting ourselves in the foot with stupid penalties,” he
said. “It’s over-exuberance. We want them to be aggressive, but we
got called for illegal procedure twice. That needs to change.”
Estancia (2-1) has a bye this week. The Eagles open up Golden West
League play against defending champion Orange Oct. 1 at Newport
Harbor.
* COSTA MESA: After allowing more than 325 rushing yards against
Huntington Beach High, Mustangs Coach Tom Baldwin knows exactly what
needs to be fixed.
“It’s the same problem we’ve had in the other two games: We give
up big plays,” he said. “[Huntington Beach] didn’t overpower us.
They’d make zero yards on three plays and then they’d gain 80 yards
on one play.”
The Mustangs (0-3) attacking defense makes them vulnerable to such
big plays. When a ballcarrier gets past the first wave of tacklers,
there can be a lot of room to run.
The Oilers’ quarterback ran for negative yards on three of his
seven carries, but still finished with 74 yards, mainly because of a
59-yard touchdown run.
“We actually did a pretty good job of stuffing him,” Baldwin said.
“We either tackle them for a loss or give up big plays”
The defense wasn’t the only group to allow big plays. The Oilers
blocked one punt and returned another 70 yards for a score.
“If you take those two plays away, we probably have a good chance
of winning the game,” Baldwin said. “We are our own worst enemy.
We’ve beaten ourselves. We’ve got to eliminate our mistakes and
eliminate those big plays.”
The Costa Mesa offense started to shine, especially junior
quarterback Ryan French, who threw for 201 yards in the 42-28
Huntington Beach loss.
“I think French is progressing very, very well,” Baldwin said. “He
scrambles when he should and he’s making the right reads, considering
he has only started three games.”
French’s job is made easier with tight end Jeff Waldron as a
target. Waldron’s seven catches for 155 yards and two touchdowns
against the Oilers are career highs.
“Jeff has been outstanding,” Baldwin said. “He catches the ball
even when he’s highly covered. There were a couple of times that I
thought the ball was going to be intercepted, but Jeff went up and
stole the ball away from them.”
Baldwin isn’t concerned about the offense, though.
“The defense is where the problems are,” he said. “We’ve just been
giving up big plays. And it’s not always the same guys making the
mistakes, so we’re going to have to do something to change that.”
* SAGE HILL: All coaches want the team to grow from one week to
the next, but Lightning Coach Tom Monarch wasn’t impressed with his
squad after its 21-7 loss to Villanova Prep Friday.
“We played a much better team than the week before [Midway
Baptist],” Monarch said. “I didn’t see the improvement I wanted to
see from Game 1. We didn’t take advantage of opportunities. Nobody
really stood out for us against Villanova. It was just one of those
games.”
Monarch said the Lightning linebackers had trouble recognizing
counters and misdirection, which led to tacklers being out of
position.
He wanted to force the Wildcats to throw, but the defense allowed
357 rushing yards.
On the positive side, the two passes Villanova Prep attempted were
both intercepted.
“It was a good hitting game,” Monarch said. “We had some arm
tackling, but we were a little bit out of position.”
The Sage Hill offense was limited by injuries to freshman
quarterback Jamie McGee. McGee had a sore throwing shoulder, and his
mobility was reduced due to a sprained ankle.
“McGee is dinged up a bit, but nothing serious,” Monarch said.
“His sore shoulder hindered him from throwing long passes. And he
tweaked his ankle. So when your quarterback has trouble rolling out,
it limits you quite a bit. It’s like going into a gun fight with a
knife. It just doesn’t work.”
The two main weapons Monarch has on offense are running back Don
Ayres and wide receiver/running back Keya Manshadi. The only problem
is, if the passing game is ineffective, defenses can concentrate on
stopping the running game. The Wildcats limited Ayres and Manshadi to
a combined 131 rushing yards and one touchdown, one week after they
combined for 277 rushing yards and four scores.
“Those are our two strengths, Manshadi and Ayres,” Monarch said.
“Keya, day-in and day-out, is a workhorse. And Ayres is a workhorse,
too.”
Sage Hill plays host to Twin Pines Friday.
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