Prep football: Calling in a debt
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Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - Jeff Brinkley recently told his Newport Harbor High
football players they supply emotional income to their community.
Saturday night, when the No. 4-seeded Sailors (10-2) host top-seeded
La Mirada (12-0) in a 7 o’clock CIF Southern Section Division VI
semifinal, Brinkley hopes to make a withdrawl.
“Hopefully, all the alumni and people in the community will fill this
(stadium) up and give us a little home crowd behind us,” Brinkley said.
“Because this one is going to take a big effort.”
Brinkley compared the challenge presented by the Matadores as similar
to previous playoff meetings against top-seeded Rubidoux (1992) and
Servite (‘96), both upset wins for the Sailors.
“Just like those two games, we’re going to need a maximum effort,”
Brinkley said.
The Sailors have received close to that in two playoff wins, thus far,
following a workmanlike 41-8 victory over Westminster with a 49-10
quarterfinal romp over Kennedy.
“We’re playing well right now and the kids have certainly practiced
extremely well the first two (playoff) weeks, which has had a lot to do
with the way we’ve played.” Brinkley said. “Hopefully, we’ll do the same
and be prepared for Saturday.”
The Sailors preparation must somehow include an answer for the
Division’s highest-scoring offense (49.4 points per game to top even
Tustin).
And while senior quarterback Erik Meyer has thrown for 2,788 yards and
36 touchdowns, Coach John Mele’s perennial powerhouse has produced nine
of its 14 postseason touchdowns on the ground.
“They have the full package. They’re not one-dimensional,” said
Brinkley, who could not compare the Suburban League champions to anyone
the Tars have faced this fall.
“We haven’t played anyone quite like them,” Brinkley said. “They can
run it effectively and (Meyer) throws the heck out of it. (Meyer is) also
a running threat when flushed out of the pocket. It’s going to take a
full defensive package.”
The 6-foot-2, 175-pound Meyer, being recruited by Oregon, Iowa State
and Fresno State, according to Mele, has also rushed for seven TDs. He is
32-0 as a prep starter, including championship runs at the freshman and
junior varsity levels.
The weaponry only begins with Meyer, however, as diminutive senior
receiver Bo Price has scored 25 touchdowns, while senior running backs
Brandon Williams and Junior Vaca have combined for another 28.
Price, whom 29-year coaching veteran Mele (the last 13 at the
Matadores’ helm) calls “probably the quickest player I’ve ever seen,” has
22 TD receptions, including 12 of 33 yards or more. He can beat defenders
deep, but has gotten most of his yards after catching short tosses. He
has also returned three punts to paydirt.
“You don’t want to see him get the ball in space,” Brinkley said of
the 5-5 Price, who has drawn double coverage in two playoffs games. “He’s
a big-play guy.”
Williams, who did not play the last two seasons, is the leading rusher
with 859 yards and 16 TDs on 117 carries.
Vaca has rushed for more than 500 yards and 12 TDs, while
Stanford-bound senior linebacker Chris Rudiger (6-1, 230) is another
backfield threat at fullback.
In addition to Price, Jarrell Shavers tops Meyer’s list of aerial
targets. Shavers has 31 catches for 615 yards and six TDs. Also a free
safety, he has intercepted a pass in each playoff game, a 52-8
first-round thumping of Woodbridge, then a 41-8 quarterfinal conquest of
Cypress.
Newport’s four-three defense will counter with a team concept, built
around denying the big play and forcing opponents to drive for the 12.1
points they are averaging this fall.
Middle linebacker Alan Saenz, All-CIF last season as a junior and the
team leader in tackles the last two falls, keys the defense.
Chris Manderino, the team’s marquee tailback, also plays a huge role
on defense at outside linebacker, while senior senior ends Ian Banigan
and Garrett Troncale (nine sacks apiece) and junior cornerback Brian
Gaeta (five interceptions) are additional stalwarts.
Harbor’s zone pass coverage held a previously productive Kennedy
passing attack to just 84 yards (148 total offense) last week. But La
Mirada’s run game likely won’t allow the Tars to regularly detach six men
into coverage.
Newport has allowed just 2,284 yards to opposing offenses, only 1,049
on the ground.
Newport’s offense is averaging 30.6 points per game, exactly 10 points
more the last five contests. Still, the Sailors pound methodically with
Manderino, more than explode with big plays.
The 6-1, 205-pound workhorse has amassed 1,797 yards on 299 carries,
surpassing the 100-yard plateau in all 10 starts at tailback, after
shifting from the quarterback spot he assumed for last year’s CIF
Division VI title run.
Operating behind tackles Robert Chai and Scott Lopez, guards Bryan
Breland and Jim Erickson, center Jeff Marshall, tight end Joe Foley and
hammerhead fullback Travis Trimble, Manderino has helped the Tars compile
nearly 60% of their 3,783 offensive yards via the rush.
Manderino’s 29 touchdowns are one behind the school single-season
record set by Brett Baker in 1997.
Junior Morgan Craig will likely be expected to produce more through
the air this week. He has completed 87 of 142 for 1,017 yards and seven
TDs, with only three interceptions. But, due to its ground dominance,
Harbor has seldom had to approach balance through the air.
Craig has completed 13 of 16 for 170 yards and one TD in the playoffs.
Gaeta leads Harbor receivers with 49 catches for 631 yards and four TDs.
Saturday’s winner will meet either No. 2-seeded Irvine (12-0) or No.
3-seeded Tustin (11-1), who square off in the other semifinal Friday at
Irvine.
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