High School Football Player of the Week: Chandler Fincher brings Texas swagger to Corona del Mar
Chandler Fincher knows how football is supposed to be played and what role the sport is supposed to play in the culture and our everyday lives.
The Corona del Mar High senior has lived in Southern California nearly a decade, but his heart â and his attitudes toward the game â are all Texas, and he plays with a fierceness borne of his Dallas hometown.
Itâs paid off handsomely for the top-seeded Sea Kings (13-0), who play in Fridayâs CIF Southern Section Division 3 final against No. 2 Simi Valley Grace Brethren (12-1) at Newport Harbor High at 7:30 p.m., their sixth section title game since 2011. Shutting down opponentsâ passing attacks has been pivotal to CdMâs success in this yearâs postseason run, and Fincher, a 5-foot-11, 185-pound cornerback, is key to that.
âItâs rare that we have someone of his abilities coming to our program, because I think he may very well be the best corner weâve had since weâve been here,â said head coach Dan OâShea, who arrived at CdM as the defensive coordinator in 2011. âHeâs got good size, a good frame to begin with, but he runs differently than anyone else on our team.
âHis ability to change directions and accelerate in coverage when the ballâs in the air â what they call recovery speed or closing speed â is freakish. Heâs just a different type athlete than weâve ever had here at Corona del Mar, and certainly in our secondary.â
Fincher was at his best in last weekâs 48-21 semifinal triumph at No. 4 Mission Hills Alemany, taking away the Warriorsâ long-ball capabilities with blanket coverage of star receiver DJ Justice â and Ephesians Prysock a bit, too â and two early interceptions of standout quarterback Miller Moss that enabled the Sea Kings to take command.
Ethan Garbers has seven total touchdowns as the undefeated Sea Kings win 48-21 on the road, advancing to their third CIF Southern Section final in four years.
It was an opportunity to show off his skills. CdM didnât play many passing teams during the regular season, and when it did, opponents were careful to avoid throwing near Fincher, an All-CIF Division 4 selection in his junior year. Playoff foes arenât as familiar with him â âNor do they care,â OâShea says â and have had no qualms issuing a challenge. Wrong move.
âIâve kind of turned it on this playoffs, because I kind of get less respect when we play these teams like [quarterfinal foe San Bernardino] Cajon and Alemany, and I love that,â said Fincher, who also had an interception in CdMâs 42-14 win over Cajon on Nov. 16. âIt gives me more opportunity to shine, and when I get that opportunity, Iâm going to make plays.â
Fincher arrived on campus as a quarterback but played running back on the freshman team, rushing for more than 1,000 yards. As a sophomore, he stepped away from the program to focus on lacrosse, discovered how much he missed football, and was back as a junior. Heâd never played on defense and faced a stiff learning curve.
âYou can ask anybody on this whole team, I started off in seven-on-seven [during the summer in 2018], and I had no clue what I was doing,â he said. âI couldnât even get Cover 3 down. It was bad. But I figured out that I was better playing [man-to-man defense rather than zone], and then it just started clicking.
âThen I got my head in the game. I knew if I want to play at the next level, then I have to get this stuff down. It only took me about six months.â
The top-seeded Sea Kings (13-0) have a rematch on Friday against the No. 2 Lancers (12-1), who beat CdM in the CIF Southern Section Division 4 final a year ago.
Fincher, who didnât play lacrosse as a junior, has worked extensively with defensive backs coach Tony Thornton on his technique and schematic understanding. He returned for his second season in the secondary bigger, stronger and â after CdM fell to Grace Brethren 26-14 in last yearâs Division 4 final â a lot hungrier.
He prodded the Sea Kings toward a desired rematch with the Lancers during a tight first half last week. They swapped touchdowns with Alemany for a 14-14 score through the first quarter, and defensive adjustments had canceled out the Warriorsâ effective screen-passing attack. So Moss, who is being recruited by all the big powers and had four college-bound receivers to choose from â âcertainly the best quarterback weâve seen all year,â OâShea said â went long.
Fincher didnât allow a completion and ended successive Alemany drives with interceptions, which CdMâs explosive offense turned into a 28-14 advantage, and, as OâShea put in, âthe gameâs in a completely different place.â The Sea Kings pulled away from there.
Fincher has received some preferred walk-on offers from colleges, but OâShea says heâs âa scholarship Division I talentâ and that better offers should arrive when the seasonâs over. No word on whom heâs talking to, but the coach knows where he most wants to play.
âIâll tell you what,â OâShea said, âIâm not sure anyone around here is more proud to be from Texas than Chandler is. Heâs a big fan of SMU football, and I think he has some real aspirations â I think theyâre valid â to go play football at SMU.â
OâShea likes that Fincher âtakes great pride in being from the Dallas areaâ and that his background lets him bring âa different bit of confidence and edge and swagger, if you will, to our team, and he does it in a Texas style that is really neat to watch.â
The Sea Kings and Vikings were among those recognized on Monday in Long Beach for reaching the CIF Southern Section final in their respective divisions.
Fincher said he âfirst put on pads early,â when he was 5 years old. But his family moved to Orange County when he was in fourth grade â first to Huntington Beach, then San Clemente, and then to Newport Beach before he started high school â and it was tough for him, in one regard.
âIn Texas, football, itâs like church,â Fincher said. âEveryone does it, everyoneâs good at it, itâs part of everyoneâs day, everyone on Saturday and Sunday watches football with their families. So moving from football out there to out here is a lot different.
âOut here, I wouldnât say itâs not taken seriously, but itâs not taken that seriously. Itâs not a tradition like it is in Texas.â
Heâs brought a little of that tradition to CdM, and itâs one reason the Sea Kings could be CIF champions for the first time in six years.
Chandler Fincher
Born: Oct. 23, 2000
Hometown: Dallas
Height: 5 feet 11
Weight: 185
Sport: Football
Year: Senior
Coach: Dan OâShea
Favorite food: Chicken fried steak
Favorite movie: âOceanâs Elevenâ
Favorite athletic moment: âTo be honest, the Alemany game was definitely the most fun Iâve ever had. They were constantly trying to get in my head, their parents were getting in my head, and once I made those two [interceptions], it has to be the most fun Iâve ever had.â
Week in review: The returning All-CIF cornerback shut down Alemanyâs DJ Justice â former baseball star David Justiceâs son and the Warriorsâ top receiver â and made two first-half interceptions to help CdM take control en route to a 48-21 road win in the CIF Southern Section Division 3 semifinals on Nov. 22.
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