Daily Pilot Football Player of the Week, Dayne Pfaff: Secondary
- Share via
education
Barry Faulkner
Mistakes in the secondary are always a primary concern. No one
knows this better than Newport Harbor High senior Dayne Pfaff.
But with the 6-foot-2, 180-pounder manning the strong safety position,
mistakes have been all but unnoticeable for a Sailor defense which has
allowed an Orange County-low 99 points.
“There’s pressure playing in the secondary, but you learn to deal with
it,’ Pfaff said. “It used to make me nervous, but nervousness didn’t help
my play. I try to overcome any nerves I have and be confident going into
every game.”
Pfaff’s play has inspired confidence from teammates and Sailor coaches.
After battling through spring, summer and fall drills to win the starting
job, Pfaff (pronounced Poff) has emerged as a major contributor to the
Tars’ run toward Friday’s CIF Southern Section Division VI title game
against Irvine.
He shares the team lead with five interceptions and his 53 tackles rank
fourth among Sailors.
“Dayne has really stepped up this year and done a good job for us,”
Newport Harbor Coach Jeff Brinkley said. “He’s matured as an athlete and
he’s come a long way with his attitude.”
Pfaff’s heroics went a long way toward protecting the Sailors’ shutout in
a 49-point semifinal drubbing of Kennedy Friday.
He was in on six tackles and broke up a pass, but his most noteworthy
contribution terminated the Fighting Irish’s best scoring threat.
After Kennedy took 11 plays to move the ball from its 19-yard line to the
Harbor 5, Irish Coach Mitch Olson, already down, 21-0, just three minutes
into the second quarter, elected to go for it on fourth-and-2. Olson
called for a halfback pass and as Steve Yaden rolled right, toward the
sideline, he lofted the ball directly into Pfaff’s zone.
“It hit me in the face,” said the Daily Pilot Player of the Week, who
hauled in the interception and returned it 24 yards.
“I was a little confused, about whether I needed to charge up and rush
the guy, which is what I started to do. But, just then, he started to
throw the ball, so I backed up. It came right to me, just like in one of
our drills.”
Pfaff, a Jr. All-American Football veteran, was drilled on football
fundamentals well before he came to Newport Harbor.
“He’s one of our better hitters in the secondary and he’s one of those
guys who has a nose for the ball,” Brinkley said. “He has good instincts
and he seems to have that knack for reading quarterbacks. I remember he
picked off a pass in a JV game and returned it 99 yards for a touchdown.”
There was a time when Pfaff’s only opportunity to contribute was during
junior varsity games. After years of being one of the best players on the
team, he found himself a lowly sophomore, buried on the varsity bench.
The experience prompted him to miss a few practices and ponder his future
in the sport.
“I just wasn’t into it,” he recalled.
Pfaff’s diminishing interest in football carried over to his junior year,
when more unexcused absences led to a two-game suspension.
But, faced with the decision to get with the program or walk away, he
assured Brinkley he would do whatever it took to contribute.
Pfaff wound up starting two late-season games at cornerback, which
propelled him into the off-season competition for one of the safety
spots.
When returning strong safety Billy Clayton missed the fall scrimmage with
a migraine, and was later sidelined for nearly four games with a deep
thigh bruise, Pfaff proved indispensable.
“Billy’s injuries really opened the window of opportunity for me and, by
the time he came back, the coaches decided to rotate (Clayton) in at
(free safety),” Pfaff said.
Pfaff is proud to be a part of such a stifling defense and thankful he
decided to stick with the sport.
“To be playing for a championship with great friends I’ve had all my
life, is awesome,” he said. “The 1990s (three previous title-game
appearances, including the 1994 Division V crown) have been great for
Harbor football. Now, it’s on us to finish that off with a championship
ring.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.