CdM scales down swagger
Barry Faulkner
With a little more than three weeks from the time fall practice
begins to the opening game, the Corona del Mar High football coaches
worked as thoroughly as they could to tutor Sea King players on the
finer points of offense, defense and special teams.
And while the dividends from this labor were apparent in Fridayâs
35-15 nonleague victory over Newport-Mesa District rival Costa Mesa,
it wasnât 12 hours later that
veteran CdM head man Dick Freeman realized there was one aspect of
the game he and his staff had failed to devote proper instructional
attention: postgame interviews.
So it was Saturday morning that Freeman, after acknowledging his
own ill-chosen words within earshot of a reporter during his postgame
address to the team on the field, implored his players to refrain
from chest-pounding verbiage that could wind up in the next dayâs
newspaper and, subsequently, onto the motivational bulletin boards of
future opponents.
Freeman and one proud CdM standout made postgame remarks revealing
the Sea Kingsâ pursuit of a CIF Southern Section Division IX
championship this fall.
âAfter I said âOne down, 13 to goâ (a 14th game is played only by
those who reach the CIF title game), I thought to myself, âOh no,
what a stupid thing to say,â â Freeman said. âI knew I should have
stopped at âOne down.â â
Freeman was also surprised to read one playerâs print-bound
prediction that the Sea Kings could âgo all the way,â as well as a
reference to smelling the CIF championship ring.
âThey werenât the kind of things we should have been saying after
the first game,â Freeman lamented. â(Humble postgame decorum) was
something we hadnât talked to the kids about, but now we have.â
There wasnât much else for the CdM coaching staff to quibble with
after the impressive debut turned in by the Sea Kings, who displayed
a strong running game, aggressive and opportunistic defense, as well
as solid special teams.
Asked how the performance held up under videotape review by the
coaches, usually a stern process during which even the smallest flaws
are scornfully ridiculed, Freeman said, â It held up pretty well. We
were pretty happy with what our kids did.â
Freeman did mention a concern over too many mistakes in the
defensive line. But most of those, he revealed, were instances where
aggression superseded wisdom.
âWe had some guys doing things we hadnât told them to do, but it
wasnât about bad effort,â Freeman said.
The efforts of the offensive line drew particular praise from
Freeman, who had identified that area as a leading concern heading
into the season.
âOur guys did block some people,â Freeman said of starting tackles
Andy Lujan and Danny Tarkesian, guards John Daley and John Hayes,
center Jeff Wicken, as well as tight end Kris Cooper and fullback
Matt Cooper. âFor the most part, we got our hats on the right
(defensive) people.â
The result was 208 yards on 46 rushing attempts, which nearly
doubled the run production of the Mustangs.
CdM senior tailback Mark Cianciulli collected 172 rushing yards
and 26 carries, including scoring runs of 74 and 2 yards. Senior
tailback Keith Long averaged 4.5 yards on five carries and drew
praise from his coach.
âI thought Keith ran it real well,â Freeman said. âWe were very
happy with him. Heâs a big olâ kid who, along with Cianciulli, gives
us two different looks at tailback. Weâll probably cut back Markâs
carries a little and give Keith the ball more.â
Different looks was a recurring theme on both sides of the ball as
the Sea Kings
realized their plan to liberally rotate bodies to keep a nucleus
of two-way standouts fresh.
âAs a staff, we worked real hard on substituting players, because
it was something we wanted to get done to keep guys rested,â Freeman
said.
Freeman singled out senior outside linebacker Jeff Reedâs play in
the linebacking corps and was also happy with the play of everyone in
the secondary.
Freeman said senior K.C. Rawlins, who sparkled at safety and
displayed a booming leg on kickoffs (drilling four well into the end
zone for touchbacks) appears to be OK after being leveled on an
onside kickoff attempt in the closing seconds. Freeman said Rawlins
was watching the ball sail out of bounds when he was blindsided by a
Mesa player on the play. No penalty was called.
Freeman and Mesa Coach Dave Perkins both said they exchanged words
about the play when Freeman came out to check on Rawlins and there
was clearly tension between the two when they met at midfield to
shake hands after the game.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.