Prep football, Bravehearts, Newport defensive backs: Secondary
education
By midterm, the Newport Harbor High secondary had passing marks
when it came to pass coverage. But, in order for the Sailors’ football
team to get where it is -- the CIF Southern Section Division VI final
Friday against Irvine -- higher marks were required.
Luckily, the secondary’s private tutor, defensive coordinator Evan
Chalmers, was there to speed up the learning curve.
“Evan is a great teacher on the practice field and he’s done an
excellent job with those guys,” Newport Coach Jeff Brinkley said. “It’s a
group that was very inexperienced. But, as the season has gone along,
they’ve developed some confidence. They’re playing really well right
now.”
Just in time, as it turned out, as the Sailors encountered
high-powered aerial attacks the last two weeks.
First, corners Brian Gaeta and Ryan Spruth, as well as safeties Dane
Barton and David Sprenger, helped limit Kennedy quarterback Geoff
Etherson to 84 passing yards, 60 fewer than his career average. Working
against a blanket zone, which included outside linebackers Chris
Manderino and Andy Rankin, Etherson, who finished his varsity career with
3,544 yards and 25 touchdowns passing, completed just 13 of 26. He threw
two interceptions, without a TD, in the Tars’ 49-10 quarterfinal victory.
The challenge got steeper for the Harbor patrol in Saturday’s
semifinal against top-seeded La Mirada and heralded senior signal caller
Erik Meyer. Meyer came in with 2,788 yards and 37 TDs in 12 games as a
varsity starter.
But, with principles similar to those used against Kennedy, the Sailor
secondary held him to 188 yards (44 below his average). Further, Meyer’s
one TD toss was one-third his average and Gaeta’s second-quarter
interception was only the fourth Meyer had thrown. Harbor won, 35-16.
“None of these guys started last year and Gaeta (a team-high six
interceptions) had never played any secondary at all, until this year,”
Chalmers said. “But they’ve worked very hard to improve and they really
have an idea what they’re doing. They don’t fear anyone, now, when there
had been games they played a little tentatively.”
Chalmers said Gaeta, a 6-foot-2, 180-pound junior, succeeds with
athleticism and a competitive mind-set.
Spruth (5-9, 162), a senior, is the most experienced, having played
corner all four years in the program, as well as in Jr. All-American
before that. He has two interceptions.
“He doesn’t have incredible skills, be he knows his job and he’s
always where he has to be,” Chalmers said.
Spruth and Gaeta have also provided sure tackling on run support.
Barton (6-0, 160) is the best hitter in the group and, assigned to the
wide side of the formation, the senior is asked to cover more ground.
“He’s a good striker in the open field and his timing to the ball has
been very good,” Chalmers said. “He also is doing a good job of calling
coverages for us.”
Sprenger (6-2, 172) is a junior who has improved the most in the
group, according to Chalmers. He is second on the team with three
interceptions.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.