Sailors have work cut out for them
Barry Faulkner
Newport Harbor High football coach Jeff Brinkley would like
nothing better than for the law of averages to kick in when the
Sailors meet nonleague visitor Marina Friday at 7 p.m.
For while Brinkley is hoping for some counterbalance after nothing
much went right for his squad in a 16-8 nonleague loss at Trabuco
Hills, it is clear not much went wrong for the Vikings in a 48-14
season-opening triumph over Paramount.
“They recovered three pooch kickoffs, ran some trick plays, and
were basically clicking on all cylinders,†said Brinkley, who saw the
Vikings take a 31-0 lead just one play into the second quarter
Friday. “Everything they did seemed to work.â€
But while such good fortune can be fleeting, Brinkley does not
expect anything but a solid challenge from Marina, which has a
victory and a tie in its last three meetings with the Sailors.
“We went and watched them scrimmage Millikan and they looked good
to us that night, too,†Brinkley said. “But both (defensive
coordinator Tony Ciarelli) and I thought they were much better than
we anticipated in their opener. They really got after Paramount.â€
The Vikings got into the CIF Southern Section Division I Playoffs
last season, no small feat in the rugged Sunset League. Coach Mike
Dodd’s squad finished third in the Sunset, knocking off Esperanza in
the process to keep the Aztecs out of the playoffs.
“They played very well last year and will definitely be as
physical or more physical than the Trabuco Hills team we saw last
week,†Brinkley said.
Marina’s 5-6 record last fall, however, included a 28-0 loss to
Newport, the only time the Vikings have been shut out in their last
52 contests, dating back to the 1995 regular-season finale.
One must delve 14 seasons into the archives to find the last time
the Sailors lost a season opener, an occurrence Brinkley believes
will have his players hungry for success Friday.
“Our seniors need to rise up and take charge of this thing,â€
Brinkley said. “I don’t think anybody felt real good about what went
on last week.â€
Much of the futility experienced by Harbor in its opener came on
offense. The Newport ground attack found little daylight against the
Mustangs, finishing with a paltry 64 rushing yards. The Sailors did
throw for 172 yards, but Brinkley lamented an atypically low
completion percentage (32%), nearly half that which Brinkley, also
the team’s offensive coordinator and quarterback coach, expects.
The seven first downs Newport managed against Trabuco were the
fewest in its last 84 games. They were also fewer than half the
per-game average (16.4) posted by last season’s Sea View League
champions and CIF Division VI semifinalists.
Senior tailback Dartangan Johnson, who had nine games of at least
100 rushing yards as a junior, collected just 21 yards on eight attempts, sitting out most of the third quarter with leg cramps. But
Johnson, the Newport-Mesa Offensive Player of the Year and a
first-team All-Sea View performer last fall, has 2,026 career rushing
yards.
Newport quarterback Michael McDonald will make his second varsity
start. He has now thrown for 386 yards and four TDs, completing 25
for 47 with two interceptions in varsity action.
McDonald’s favorite target figures to be sophomore Spencer Link,
who had four receptions for 102 yards, including a 60-yard touchdown,
in his first varsity start last week.
Mike Toole, a senior receiver, picked up 41 yards on his lone
reception last week.
Defensively, the Sailors will try to contain Marina’s run-first
attack, which features several ball carriers.
Joe Vargas, a 6-foot, 200-pound senior, rushed for 48 yards on
eight carries last week, but scored three TDs. Junior Daniel
Falkenstein (6-1, 210) collected 118 yards on seven carries, while
senior Walter Hildebrand (6-2, 195) and senior Keith Heyward (6-3,
215) are additional threats.
Junior Matt Brennan completed 4 of 13 passes for 70 yards and two
TDs and also rushed for a TD against Paramount.
The Vikings also boast a solid kicker in sophomore Yuto Someya,
who toed field goals of 37 and 35 yards last week.
Newport Harbor, which is 14-1-1 in its last 16 Week 2 contests,
leads the series with Marina, 16-4-1.
The two schools were Sunset League rivals from 1967-80.
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