Prep football: Sea View title showdown
Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - Visiting Woodbridge High has had two weeks to
prepare for Friday’s 7 p.m. Sea View League football showdown at Newport
Harbor. Whether the Warriors are too weakened to win, remains to be seen.
Woodbridge (6-1, 2-0 in league), ranked No. 7 in CIF Southern Section
Division VI, saw Will Banks and Chris Westover, its top two running
backs, both go down with knee injuries in its last game, a 42-21
trouncing of Laguna Hills Oct. 19. The Warriors had a bye last week.
The status of both players remains uncertain, but if Banks, a two-way
starter and arguably the Warriors’ best player, is unable to play,
Woodbridge’s running game will rely on a replacement who has not passed
the 100-yard mark this season.
Banks is the team’s leading rusher and scorer with 649 yards and six
TDs on 124 carries. He also has contributed greatly to the Warriors’ 46
defense.
Westover has rushed for 76 yards and two TDs on 18 carries, and no
other Warrior has more than 38 yards rushing this season.
Newport Harbor Coach Jeff Brinkley, whose team (7-0-1, 3-0) is ranked
No. 7 in Orange County and No. 1 in CIF Division VI, won’t worry about
who does or does not suit up for the opposition Friday.
Instead, the quest for the Sea View League championship, which would
be the school’s 10th league crown in 71 varsity seasons, is enough to
occupy the focus of Brinkley and his players.
“It’s a league championship game, even though Woodbridge still has
another game with Aliso Niguel (Nov. 9),” Brinkley said. “A league title
means a lot. Our school hasn’t won very many and for us to win one would
be quite an accomplishment.”
A victory would give Harbor its sixth outright league title, its third
in Brinkley’s 16-season tenure.
Even without Banks, however, the Warriors figure to provide a
formidable challenge. Coach Rick Gibson’s squad has won five straight
after a 33-15 loss in Week 2 to highly regarded Foothill, ranked No. 1 in
Division VI most of the season, before falling to No. 5 with a loss last
week to El Modena.
Newport should be ready to assume the challenge, however, especially
after stumbling early in last week’s 20-10 league win over Laguna Hills.
Laguna Hills’ 10-0 lead was the first deficit the Sailors had faced
all season and the Tars parlayed five Hawks’ turnovers into a
come-from-behind triumph.
Brinkley expects Woodbridge to come out throwing, with junior
quarterback Tim Kegel at the controls.
“They’ve spread people out and thrown the ball a lot,” Brinkley said.
Kegel has completed 76 of 165 for 845 yards, but has thrown only one
more touchdown (eight) than interception.
Newport Harbor senior quarterback Morgan Craig has thrown for more
yards (917) and touchdowns (14) and has the same number of completions in
55 fewer attempts (hitting on 69%).
J.T. Perryman has been Kegel’s leading target with 24 catches for 301
yards and two TDs. Sean Smith, with 22 receptions for 229 yards and two
TDs, is also a receiver of note.
Opponents have earned more yardage through the air (922) than on the
ground (877) against a Newport Harbor defense that has surrendered the
fewest points of any county team.
Opponents have posted 47 points against Harbor this fall, but only 45
have come against the Tars’ defense and 14 of those were scored against a
reserve unit.
Senior cornerback Adam Kerns (a team-high four interceptions),
linebackers Cory Ray and Tyler Miller, as well as end Jim Rothwell and
tackle Scott Kohan, have been defensive anchors for the Sailors all
season.
Senior nose guard Joe Foley should also be ready to shine after
another week to recover from an ankle injury that noticeably slowed him
last week.
Senior Brian Gaeta, making his third start after missing five games
with an ankle injury, should also be ready to assume a bigger defensive
role.
Offensively, the aforementioned Craig leads an efficient unit, which
is averaging nearly 28 points per game.
In addition to his passing excellence, Craig has rushed for 347 yards,
including 181 yards and all three of his rushing TDs on 25 carries in
three league games.
When Craig isn’t scrambling, and he’s been sacked just once in the
last six games, he has spread the ball around to a talented group of
receivers.
Kerns and junior Mike McDonald lead the team with 16 receptions
apiece, but Kerns has produced seven aerial TDs. Senior Jon Vandersloot,
who missed most of the preleague campaign, has also bolstered the group
of late. He has 11 catches for 110 yards and a touchdown.
Gaeta, who caught 62 passes as a junior, hauled in five against Laguna
Hills.
Junior Dartangan Johnson has been the workhorse of the ground game. He
has rushed 190 times for 1,235 yards and eight TDs, operating behind a
massive front paced by UCLA-bound senior left tackle Robert Chai,
Montana-bound senior center Jeff Marshall and senior guard Bryan Breland.
All three are two-year starters.
Newport Harbor leads the series, 10-3, including two straight wins,
though Woodbridge has earned a split in the last four meetings.
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