Friday night at the oasis
Barry Faulkner
CATHEDRAL CITY - First-class golf courses surround Cathedral City
High, but it’s a more compact grass layout which has become a desert
oasis for Coach Rick Baughman’s Lions, who host Newport Harbor Friday for
a 7:30 p.m. nonleague football game.
The two-time defending Desert Valley League champions (6-2 and ranked
No. 4 in CIF Southern Section Division VIII) have won 13 straight home games at the venue known locally as the Lions’ den.
The Lions haven’t exactly been a soft touch on the road the last three
seasons, during which they have built a 27-5 record and a reputation for
aerial fireworks.
“They’re used to winning and they throw the ball all over the yard,”
said Newport Coach Jeff Brinkley, who witnessed the run-and-shoot
practitioners’ 18-7 league win over Indio in person last week. “They draw
a nice crowd and it’s a nice atmosphere to play in.”
The Sailors (6-2, 2-1 in the Sea View League and ranked No. 6 in CIF
Division VI), of course, are hardly short on winning tradition
themselves. They are 25-6-1 over the same three seasons and have a pair
of section titles in the last six years, including last year’s Division
VI crown.
Baughman, who referred to the Tars as “a team that looks like Penn
State,” after last week’s triumph, is fully aware of Harbor’s prowess.
Newport, which Brinkley said will “heal up” by not practicing in full
gear during its week off from league play, would clinch a guaranteed
playoff berth should Aliso Niguel defeat visiting Woodbridge Friday. If
Woodbridge wins, the Tars must knock off Aliso Nov. 10, or hope Irvine
handles Woodbridge, to be assured a top-three finish. Two Woodbridge
triumphs and an Aliso win over Harbor next week, would produce a
three-way tie for second, which would be broken by coin flips.
The Sailors are led offensively by senior tailback Chris Manderino,
who has nearly 1,200 rushing yards in six starts, since shifting from
quarterback. He has 1,179 yards on 208 carries and has scored 15
touchdowns.
Junior Morgan Craig has completed 48 of 85 for 551 yards, five TDs and
only one interception. Brinkley said last week, Craig is on the verge of
a breakout performance.
Brian Gaeta leads Sailor receivers with 30 catches for 398 yards and
three TDs.
Cathedral City’s defense is led by All-CIF senior linebacker DeShaun
Bradley.
Brinkley said Harbor could add a fifth defensive back to combat the
run-and-shoot, with sophomore Bryce Sawyer the likely candidate to join
cornerbacks Gaeta (four interceptions) and Ryan Spruth, as well as
safeties Dane Barton and David Sprenger.
Brinkley also said junior pass-rush specialist Jim Rothwell could see
playing time on the defensive line, where senior ends Garrett Troncale
(eight sacks) and Ian Banigan (4.5 sacks) could be shifted around to
exploit matchups with Lion pass blockers.
If given time, Cathedral City senior quarterback Blake Moorman has
shown he can be dangerous. The 6-foot, 165-pounder has thrown for 1,334
yards and 17 TDs this fall (completing 86 of 175 with eight
interceptions). He has 4,057 yards and 55 TDs in his two seasons as the
starter.
Senior receiver Jeff Lambert has 44 catches for 701 yards and 11 TDs,
while running back Thaniel Lee has rushed for 780 yards and 11 TDs on 119
attempts.
“It’s going to be a big challenge for our DBs and our pass rush, and
if you start detaching too many people, they will run the ball,” Brinkley
said.
Cathedral City, which was ranked No. 1 in Division VIII until losing
to league rival and current No. 1 La Quinta, 53-21, also lost to San
Bernardino, 33-20. But Baughman, was not there for the La Quinta game,
having been ejected the week before, and seven starters were suspended
against San Bernardino.
At full strength, the Lions have posted single-game outputs of 69, 60
and 57 points, against Desert Hot Springs, Coachella Valley and Moreno
Valley, respectively. They are averaging nearly 36 points per game.
Harbor’s defense has yielded only 12 points per game, but 36 of the 97
points scored by opponents have come in the fourth quarter against
backups.
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