OCC football: Unforgettable
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Steve Virgen
COSTA MESA - Remember the Titans?
Remember the Pirates!
The Orange Coast College football team won the Mission Conference
Central Division championship with a 32-18 victory over visiting
Saddleback Saturday and made 2000 a season to remember.
OCC (6-4, 4-1 in the division) finishes as co-champion with Palomar, a
56-7 winner over Golden West. Fullerton missed on its chance to share the
title with a 35-23 loss at Santa Ana.
Against Saddleback (3-7, 2-3), the Pirates did what they have done
since their fourth game of the season: Dig down deep and come together as
a team.
One heartbeat. Once again, true to their theme for the season.
Yes, Fullerton spoiled the Pirates’ winning run last week. But, OCC
still accomplished what nearly no one thought it would.
The Bucs won the division title. They beat powerhouses Mt. San Antonio
and Palomar. They finished above .500 for the first time since 1993, won
their first title since 1990 and earned their first bowl bid since ’93.
“When we were down with an 0-3 record, Tyrone McNeace came up with the
‘one heartbeat,’ ” said James Dawkins, an Estancia High product who ran
for 134 yards and three touchdowns on 18 carries. “And every game since,
we’ve played like one heartbeat. Everyone just came together.”
With the Pirates protecting a seven-point lead, Dawkins spun out of a
tackle and sped toward a 52-yard touchdown run to put the game away in
the fourth quarter.
After OCC Coach Mike Taylor congratulated his team and the Pirates in
turn poured water on him, Dawkins was quick to give credit to his
teammates.
“The offensive line did a good job,” Dawkins said. “Without them
springing me into the secondary I wouldn’t have done anything.”
Gary Lewellyn, the 31-year-old Orange County police officer, would be
among those linemen. Lewellyn, just as the other Pirates will tell you,
said OCC deserves the Strawberry Bowl bid it was awarded Sunday (the
Pirates will play at Cerritos Dec. 2).
“We beat (Mt. SAC) the No. 1 team in California,” Lewellyn said. “If
we’re the only team that can beat them, we should be able to get a bowl
game.”
Pirates’ linebacker and defensive captain Dustin Davis agreed. The win
over Mt. SAC and the division title should get OCC into a bowl game, he
said.
“If we play our game, we can beat anybody,” Davis said. “We’re
co-champs with Palomar even though we beat them. (The bowl selection
committee) should consider us just because of the teams we have beaten.”
OCC quarterback Nick Higgs said the greatest moment of the season was
the upset victory at Mt. SAC, 26-25, on Sept. 30. Perhaps even greater
than their division title, the Bucs are proud of that win.
“That basically turned around our season,” said Higgs, who threw for
134 yards and one touchdown. “We stuck together and made the big plays
when it counted. We never gave up.”
The Pirates went to Mt. SAC with an 0-3 record and nine points to show
for themselves in those losses. The Mounties had defeated OCC eight years
in a row. Higgs was 7 the last time the Bucs beat Mt. SAC (1989).
But, OCC pulled off the impossible and drove its momentum with four
more wins, which included a triumph in Pasadena, setting the school
record for offensive yards in a game over Golden West, shocking Palomar,
and outlasting Santa Ana in a three-overtime thriller.
The season has been unforgettable, especially for Taylor. There is a
simple reason why the Bucs were so special this season.
“They’ve played to their potential,” Taylor said. “I’ve coached for
over 20 years. I coached on that Edison CIF championship team (1979) and
we obviously had some great, great players. This team has some good
players. They have played to their level. This team deserves a chance to
go on and play another week.”
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