Ocean View football defeats Western, wins first league title since 1989
Reporting from Anaheim â Ocean View High football coach Luis NuĂąez broke into a sprint as he led his team into the halftime locker room.
The Seahawks could hardly believe what had transpired, as they rattled off 24 unanswered points in the second quarter. It amounted to an insurmountable lead that even one of the top offenses in Orange County could not overcome.
Noah Hickman had three passing touchdowns and two rushing scores, as the visiting Seahawks defeated Western 45-7 to claim a share of the Pac 4 League title, the schoolâs first since 1989, on Thursday night.
âFirst time in [29] years,â NuĂąez said excitedly. âItâs just awesome. There are just so many emotions going through my head. When I took this job seven years ago, there were a lot of people that told me I would never win here. âYou will never win at Ocean View.â
âI hope the city is taking notice that we play football in Huntington Beach, too.â
Ocean View (9-1, 2-1 in league) will share the league title with Western (8-2, 2-1) and Laguna Beach (8-2, 2-1). The Breakers defeated Godinez 45-7 in their league finale.
For the Pioneers, it is their first league championship since 2008.
Ocean View drew the short end of the stick when it came to the coin flips, which determined that the Seahawks would receive the third seed out of the Pac 4 League. Western got the No. 1 seed and Laguna Beach the No. 2 seed.
The Seahawks did everything that they could to strengthen their case for an at-large selection into the CIF Southern Section Division 11 playoffs, blowing out the top-ranked Pioneers on the road.
When I took this job seven years ago, there were a lot of people that told me I would never win here. âYou will never win at Ocean View.â
— Luis NuĂąez, Ocean View High coach
The Seahawks, who are ranked fifth in Division 11, shut out Western in the first half, which was perhaps the gameâs biggest surprise. Western senior quarterback Anthony Munoz came in having thrown 45 touchdowns through nine games.
âWe kind of switched it up with our grizzly [strong safety],â Seahawks safety Kermel Anwell said. âWe wanted to add a faster grizzly, which was Raelen Bruce. He really helped us out with that because he was shutting down all of those outside plays and everything.
âI was playing deep the whole time. Coach was telling me to stay deep. âDo not look at the quarterback.â Naeco Logan, too, helping out on defense, making sure they donât get any yards on us.â
Uncharacteristic drops from Munozâs receivers, as well as good ball pursuit by the Seahawksâ secondary, helped Ocean View keep the Pioneers off the board. Defensive backs Will Earthman, Hunter Arce, Bruce and Logan stood out for the Seahawks.
Ocean View opened the scoring on its second drive. Hickman converted a third-and-15 with a deep pass to Brandon Alcaraz that went for 53 yards. Two plays later, Hickman took the ball up the middle on a designed run for a 20-yard touchdown.
From there, the Seahawks played keep away, thanks to four turnovers by the Pioneers in the second quarter. Ocean View led 14-0 when Earthman ran under a deep pass from Hickman for a 48-yard touchdown.
Then Jobe Belles recovered the first of back-to-back fumbles on pooch kicks. The Seahawks turned the first into a 26-yard field goal by AJ Stead.
Bruce recovered the second fumble, which led to an 11-yard rushing touchdown by Hickman to give Ocean View a 24-0 lead with 2:16 left in the second quarter.
Western finally fair caught a kickoff, but the possession lasted just one play, as Jake Kurucz intercepted Munoz off a deflection. Ocean Viewâs suddenly big-play offense struck again, as Anwell brought in a 30-yard score to go up 31-0.
âIn big games, coaches always say, âYouâve got to win the turnover battle,â â said NuĂąez, whose team also stopped Western on four of its five fourth-down plays. âItâs part of the games. We caught breaks, and we took advantage.
âThatâs all football is about. We took advantage of their turnovers, and our kids did a great job. They were hungry.â
Ocean View had 185 rushing yards, led by Rodrigo Adameâs 94 yards on 10 carries. Hickman felt that the Seahawks ran the ball enough to make the Pioneers respect the run, allowing them to have success with passes down the field.
âThey had to pick,â Hickman said. âThey had to watch our run. Our running game was unstoppable really. Then they had to watch over the top.â
In the second half, Hickman added a 55-yard touchdown to Alcaraz on a third-and-19 play. Jonathan Gonzalez scored a short-yardage rushing touchdown in the fourth quarter.
When asked if he was more impressed with his teamâs offense or defense, NuĂąez had trouble making a decision.
âHow do I pick?â said NuĂąez, who saw Dillon Grunbaum, Jesus Ramirez, Josh Roberts, Erik Soriano and Arce record sacks for the Seahawks. âOur defense gave up seven points to a team that has been scoring 50 points a game.â
Pac 4 League
Ocean View 45, Western 7
SCORE BY QUARTERS
Ocean View 7 â 24 â 7 â 7 â 45
Western 0 â 0 â 7 â 0 â 7
FIRST QUARTER
OV â Hickman 20 run (Stead kick), 5:16.
SECOND QUARTER
OV â Earthman 48 pass Hickman (Stead kick), 9:30.
OV â Stead 26 FG, 5:52.
OV â Hickman 11 run (Stead kick), 2:16.
OV â Anwell 30 pass Hickman (Stead kick), 1:20.
THIRD QUARTER
OV â Alcaraz 55 pass Hickman (Stead kick), 7:07.
W â Mendoza 6 pass Munoz (Palacios), 5:03.
FOURTH QUARTER
OV â Gonzalez 1 run (Stead kick), 5:11.
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
OV â Adame, 10-94.
W â Munoz, 8-34.
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
OV â Hickman, 8-11-0, 207, 3 TDs.
W â Munoz, 18-39-2, 162, 1 TD.
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING
OV â Alcaraz, 3-116, 1 TD.
W â Cai. Savage, 9-69.
Twitter: @ProfessorTurner
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