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BARRY FAULKNER
High school football coaches commonly refer to the opening of league
play as the second season. For those charged with handicapping league
races, it’s the second-guessing season.
So, at the risk of providing some advance bulletin-board material,
as well as some alleged foresight that history may render folly by
mid-November, here’s one take on the upcoming races in the Sea View
and Pacific Coast leagues.
For a third straight season, those seeking the Pacific Coast
League crown must somehow find a way around the big bad Timberwolves
of Northwood High.
Northwood, the two-time defending champion, has won its last 10
league games and gone 23-2 in the regular season, since an 0-5 PCL
debut in 2000.
Coach Rick Curtis, harvesting talent from the neighborhoods that
used to feed the Irvine High juggernaut, appears to have another
title contender this fall. Northwood (4-1), ranked No. 5 in CIF
Southern Section Division IX, suffered its only loss to Los Amigos.
The Lobos, No. 2 in Division IX, join No. 3 La Habra, PCL contender
University, ranked No. 4, as well as unranked Western as my foremost
CIF Division IX title contenders.
Both Northwood and Uni have allowed 76 points this season, fewest
among PCL teams.
University (4-1) posted the most impressive preleague campaign of
any PCL squad. Coach Mark Cunningham’s Trojans, rolled up a PCL-best
158 points and lost only to intracity rival Irvine. Uni thumped
Northview, ranked No. 2 in Division IX at the time, 48-13, last week
and, led by quarterback A.J. Moskus, a senior who is also a star
basketball player, could have the horses to match the 2000 unit as
the school’s only league champions.
The Northwood-Uni argument, by the way, will be settled when the
two square off Friday at Irvine High.
Corona del Mar and Tesoro occupy the second tier and figure to
battle one another for the league’s third guaranteed playoff berth.
CdM (3-2), when healthy, has skill-position talent to burn and may
have the league’s best athlete in junior receiver Kevin Welch. The
Sea Kings, however, have been weakened by injuries in the trenches --
the one area their lack of depth was most precarious -- and if junior
quarterback Tom Welch misses any significant time with the shoulder
ding he sustained in Friday’s 45-0 loss to La Habra, CdM may wind up
5-5, in fourth place, and hoping for an at-large playoff bid.
Then again, the Sea Kings’ rugged schedule, including Newport
Harbor, Troy and Golden West League title contender Costa Mesa, as
well as a scheduling break of beginning league with Laguna Beach and
Calvary Chapel, could help Coach Dick Freeman’s squad gather itself
for a run at matching last year’s second-place finish.
CdM faithful should circle Nov. 7 on the calendar, when the Sea
Kings visit Tesoro. The Titans, playing their first varsity season
last year, took exception to what they deemed unsportsmanlike play
calling in a 48-28 CdM victory.
Tesoro owns, perhaps, the league’s most impressive 2003 victory,
having stunned Irvine, 25-22, in Week 3. The school’s first senior
class is backed by talented juniors Nick Nelson (773 yards and seven
touchdowns passing), Erik Hamren (22 receptions for 273 yards) and
Evan Handa (363 rushing yards and three TDs).
Laguna Beach (3-2) earned an at-large playoff berth last season.
But, despite talented quarterback Alex Wilson (1,094 yards and 13 TDs
passing) and gifted two-way performer Jake Wheeler (35 catches for
632 yards and 10 total TDs this season), Coach Dave Holland’s
Breakers, appear destined for fifth place.
Calvary Chapel (1-2-2), led by first-year head man Lyle Lansdell,
a former offensive coordinator under Freeman at CdM, will have
trouble winning a league game.
*
Now the Sea View, where Foothill ran the table last fall in its
first season after coming over from the Century League and all four
of this year’s title contenders have spots in the CIF Division VI top
10.
The Knights (4-1), ranked a disparagingly low No. 8 after falling,
44-21, to San Clemente Friday, have, once again, earned the right to
be called the favorite, despite unbeaten preleague runs by Newport
Harbor and Laguna Hills and an impressive 4-1 mark posted by Irvine
thus far.
Foothill’s 1,924 offensive yards are at least 400 more than any
other Sea View rival, thus far, and its 172 points are 26 more than
runner-up Irvine. Mike Alba (519 rushing yards and eight TDs), Casey
Daniels (955 yards and 10 TDs passing) and Brad Walker (25 catches
for 420 yards and five TDs) seem to have stepped in nicely for 2003
graduates Mike Liti, Don Poole and Quincy Lever, respectively.
The loss to San Clemente, No. 6 in Division II, should not be
taken too seriously, since Foothill fell to the Tritons, 30-20, last
season, before winning seven in a row to reach the Division VI
semifinals.
Laguna Hills may be as impressive defensively as Foothill is
offensively. The Hawks lead Orange County, as well as Division VI, in
scoring defense, having allowed just 35 points this season.
Quarterback Chris Lamkin keys the offense with 777 yards and eight
TDs passing, while 6-foot-1, 220-pound running back Siaosi
Makakaufaki is producing 4.2 yards per carry.
The Hawks defeated Trabuco Hills, 27-9. Newport Harbor boasts a
35-8 win over the Mustangs, who also fell to Aliso Niguel, 21-0.
Newport, which has split its 1,408 offensive yards nearly evenly
between the run and the pass, has the most balanced offense in the
league. And, the Tars are tied for third in the county in scoring
defense with 44 points allowed.
But after beating up on teams with a combined 8-17 record,
questions remain as to how they’ll stack up in league. Some answers
may be provided in Friday’s home clash with Foothill, but the Sailors
are 3-5 in their last eight league openers and two of the wins were
by a combined seven points.
Junior receiver Spencer Link (nine TDs and a 21-yard average on 21
receptions) will need to keep making big plays if the Sailors are to
contend.
Irvine, usually as tough as Coach Terry Henigan’s sideline scowl,
had a turnover-marred loss to Tesoro, but boasts wins over solid
programs Western, Valencia and University. But whether the Vaqueros
have enough to find the consistently high level needed to earn a
top-three finish in this circuit, remains to be seen. At least they
will never be outcoached.
The Vaqs can announce their presence in Thursday’s league opener
on the road against Laguna Hills.
Aliso Niguel’s 89 points are the fewest among Sea View schools,
which renders the Wolverines (3-2) an unlikely playoff contender. But
comparative scores, such as the aforementioned Trabuco Hills win and
a 21-7 triumph over a Capistrano Valley team that Laguna Hills
handled, 34-10, make it difficult to dismiss Coach Joe Wood’s
contingent.
Alas, Woodbridge (1-4) has lost seven straight league games. And
there appears to be little relief in sight for Coach Rick Gibson and
his Warriors, who have been outscored, 154-98, this fall.
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