Sailors sputter in debut
Barry Faulkner
With just 10 regular-season games, the work/reward ratio in high
school football is more heavily skewed toward work than in any other
prep sport.
So, after months of preparation, including offseason
weightlifting, spring practice, summer workouts, and up to three
practices a day before school starts, the immediacy of gratification
provided by the seasonâs first victory is not something coaches like
to put off.
But, for the first time in 14 seasons, Newport Harbor Coach Jeff
Brinkley and his players are dealing with the disappointment that
comes with losing a season debut, after host Trabuco Hills earned a
16-8 nonleague triumph Thursday.
âEverybody is disappointed, obviously,â Brinkley said of the mood
following the setback. âWe all work long and hard in the offseason,
then to go out and not play well is disappointing for all of us.â
Brinkley pointed to several areas of concern, including one finger
of blame directly at himself.
âI didnât think we played with very much enthusiasm, which is
something Iâm very disappointed about, because thatâs my
responsibility,â Brinkley said. âWe werenât that highly motivated for
some reason, which is something I need to address.â
Brinkley was also quick to credit the Mustangs, who won their
opener for the third straight year, the fourth time in the last five
seasons.
âWe knew they had a good football team and they did what they had
to do,â Brinkley said. âThey played with more emotion than we did.â
Brinkley lamented his teamâs inability to sustain much
offensively, and also itâs lack of effectiveness in stopping Dana
Hills, particularly on third and fourth down.
âWeâve got to be able to run the ball and stop the run,â he said.
âThere were times when we stopped their running game to a good
degree, but then we let them convert on third down. Their percentage
of converting third down was extremely high, which meant we had
trouble getting our offense on the field. And, since we didnât have
the ball that much (only 16:22 time of possession to Trabucoâs
31:38), we never got into much of a rhythm running the ball.â
Trabuco converted 11 of its first 14 third-or fourth-down
situations, which included one Newport stop that resulted in a
Mustang field goal. Trabuco converted 11 of 17 similar situations for
the game.
Meanwhile, Newport averaged just 4.6 plays on its nine
possessions, the longest of which lasted seven plays before a punt.
Harbor converted only three of its 11 third-down situations, two of
which produced interceptions.
Newportâs offensive produced just 64 rushing yards. Newportâs
rushing leader was senior Rhett Hartsfield, who posted 27 yards on
four third-quarter carries, all of which occurred while senior
tailback Dartangan Johnson was recovering from leg cramps. The 27
yards marked the least by a single-game Sailor leader in 108 games,
dating back to late in the 1993 campaign.
There was some productivity through the air, as senior Michael
McDonald finished with 172 passing yards. The majority of that,
however, came on two plays, the first a 60-yard catch-and-run by
sophomore receiver Spencer Link and the second a 41-yard hookup with
senior wideout Mike Toole
That McDonald-to-Toole connection put the Sailors, trailing at the
time, 16-8, at the Trabuco 18-yard line with just more than four
minutes left. A run and three passes into the end zone, however,
produced just 4 yards, allowing Trabuco to take over on downs.
Newportâs defense forced Trabuco to go three-and-out for the
second straight time and the Tars took over after a punt on their own
48 with 1:24 left.
âAs bad as we played, we had the opportunity to at least tie the
game,â Brinkley said.
After a 22-yard McDonald-to-Link completion, however, Newport
failed to convert four successive passes into the end zone and
Trabuco ran out the final 46 seconds to preserve its win.
A handful of Sailors left the game with leg craps and Brinkley
said he has taken steps to avoid future occurrences.
âI had the trainer give the kids a talk Friday about hydration,â
Brinkley said. â(Replacing fluids) is something that has to take
place throughout the week. Hopefully, our kids can work on that so it
wonât be a problem in the future.â
Brinkley said a long, hot bus ride to Mission Viejo through
rush-hour traffic may have contributed to his playersâ hydration
problems.
âIt would have been nice if we had an air-conditioned bus like the
one the cheerleaders rode on,â Brinkley said. âOur guys were worked
into a lather (sweat), before they even did anything on the field.â
In addition to singling out the efforts of Link and junior
noseguard Austin Nieto, Brinkley had praise for Trabuco senior
quarterback Brian White, a 6-foot-5, 225-pounder who completed 14 of
25 for 163 yards and one TD and also rushed for 24 yards, including
some key scrambles for first-down yardage.
âHe scrambled a few times on third down and hit a couple (passes)
on third down,â Brinkley said. âHeâs definitely a big-time college
prospect. I heard Colorado, Ohio State and Washington are all
recruiting him pretty heavily.â
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