Tars, Link answer CdM
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Barry Faulkner
The Corona del Mar High football team did its best to deliver an
early knockout in Friday night’s 42nd edition of the Battle of the
Bay against Newport Harbor, before 7,000 at Orange Coast College.
But the Sailors countered with a series of jabs, or, perhaps more
correctly, jab steps, jukes and jaunts, primarily from junior
receiver Spencer Link, to key a 29-14 come-from-behind victory.
Link, who in 17 varsity games has made a habit out of turning the
most seemingly innocent short completion into a highlight, did so
twice against the Sea Kings, to help Newport improve to 3-0 and
defeat its arch rival for the fifth straight season.
“He’s a playmaker,” Sailors Coach Jeff Brinkley said of the
5-foot-9, 171-pound dervish, who stepped around a fallen cornerback
to race 43 yards with a quick out pass from Kasey Peters to cut into
CdM’s 14-0 first-quarter lead.
After a 25-yard Brian Campos field goal pulled the visitors within
14-9 at halftime and senior tailback Matt Encinias scored the first
of his two touchdown runs to give the Tars the lead, Link made
Harbor’s play of the night. After fielding a short Peters pitch near
the east sideline, he unleashed some moves on the entire secondary,
broke back toward the west sideline, then turned up and sprinted into
the end zone for a 58-yard back breaker that covered about 90 yards.
“If you get him the ball in space, he’s usually going to make a
play for you,” Brinkley said. “We got him in man-to-man coverage and
when that happens, he’s tough to cover. When he came across to field
toward our bench [on his second TD], the coaches kept yelling ‘Turn
it up! Turn up! Then, when he got to the sideline and around the
corner, [running backs coach Bill Brown] said ‘I guess he turned it
up.’ ”
Link, an All-Sea View League receiver as a sophomore who came in
with six catches for 98 yards and three TDs this fall, finished with
five catches for 145 yards (a 29-yard average).
The Sailors, ranked No. 4 in CIF Southern Section Division VI,
were forced to turn up their intensity after the Sea Kings (2-1),
ranked No. 9 in CIF Division IX, struck early for two quick
touchdowns.
CdM’s own playmaker, junior Kevin Welch, snatched a deep pass from
his twin brother, Tom, between two Sailor defenders, for a 76-yard
touchdown on the first play of the game. The first of two David Del
Fante conversion kicks made it 7-0 with just 17 seconds elapsed and
also created a hush among the Newport faithful.
Six plays after the ensuing kickoff, Matt Burgner stripped the
ball on a sack and CdM teammate Zach Wishengrad recovered at the
Sailors’ 16.
After Tom Welch scrambled on third down for 10 yards and a first
down at the 2, he then hit Kevin Welch with another scoring strike
with 7:09 left in the first quarter.
“We got a good six minutes in anyway,” CdM Coach Dick Freeman
said. “I thought we did OK, but we just wore out.”
The offensive heroics of Link and Encinias, who rushed for 121 of
his 179 yards after halftime, as well as strong play in the trenches
on both sides of the ball, wore on CdM.
And the Sea Kings didn’t help themselves any by losing two
first-half fumbles, the latter forced by Sailor outside linebacker
Greg Miner and recovered by Newport’s Ryan Rippon at the Sea Kings’
20 to set up the second-quarter field goal.
Trailing, 22-14, early in the fourth quarter, the Sea Kings drove
24 yards to the Sailors’ 19, before back-to-back sacks by tackle Mark
Temple and end Saami Khalifian ended the threat with 3:56 left.
Newport proceeded to march 66 yards on five plays, all Encinias
carries, to finalize the scoring and earn its ninth win in the last
10 Battle of the Bay contests.
“We talked all week about not letting [the Sea Kings] out-athlete
us,” Brinkley said. “We saw against Costa Mesa they just chucked it
up and let [Kevin Welch] make a play and, sure enough, he made a
great play on their first snap. Then, their quarterback makes a nice
scramble to set up their second touchdown.”
Despite the early deficit, however, Khalifian said his team
remained focused.
“We came to play all four quarters and not be all hyped up at the
start,” said Khalifian, who also recovered a fumble caused by Thomas
Martin and now has a sack in each of Harbor’s victories this season.
“We let them get two cheap ones, but we knew everything was going to
be OK. We knew we were a good team and we played like it in the
second half.”
Kevin Welch finished with 97 yards on six catches and Tom Welch
led the hosts with 43 yards rushing.
Linebackers Wishengrad, Tyler Lance and Mordy Ornguze all stood
out defensively for CdM, while Newport’s defensive unit was paced by
Khalifian, Temple, linebackers Martin, Trevor Theriot, Miner and
Taylor Young.
“Even in the first half, I was pretty pleased with our defense,”
Brinkley said.
But Link’s ability to elude tacklers was the biggest key.
“I’m pretty confident I can make the first guy miss,” Link said.
“I just caught the ball and made a play. I wasn’t thinking about
making certain moves, I just wanted to let the play come to me. I
think everyone was kind of shocked to be behind, 14-0, but everyone
just started working harder to get the win.”
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