Community college football: Who says the Pirates are playing for
nothing
Steve Virgen
COSTA MESA - The party-crashers are coming to town. Those tricky
Hornets of Fullerton College will attempt to cut off the celebration when
they visit Orange Coast College for a Mission Conference Central division
football contest today at 1 p.m.
Last year, the Hornets (4-4, 1-2 in the Central division) snapped the
Pirates (3-5, 1-2) five-game winning streak and forced the
co-championship label on them.
This year, Fullerton, which completed three of four trick plays on OCC
last season en route to a 47-35 win, will try to crash the party again,
as Coast will pay tribute to the 1951 Pirates team, the school’s first
championship squad.
“It’s a big day for us,” OCC Coach Mike Taylor said. “It will be the
sophomores’ last home game and 19 sophomores will be introduced. We also
have the class of ’51 team (to honor).”
The Pirates have strengthened the cause to defend themselves with a
20-10 victory over visiting Santa Ana, last week, that ended a four-game
skid. Fullerton is also coming off a victory, a 34-16 win over Golden
West, which kept the Hornets’ bowl hopes alive, though they must win
their next two games for consideration.
Coast found its running game in the win over the Dons, rushing for 311
yards on 51 carries. OCC freshman tailback Niles Mittasch, who is
averaging 5.3 yards a carry, ran for a season-high 165 yards and one
touchdown on 21 carries. Mittasch, the No. 5 runner in the Mission
Conference, who has 511 yards on 96 carries, has started just four games
for the Pirates, played wide receiver in the opener and missed the
debacle in Palomar because of an injury.
Mittasch saw more running room against Santa Ana because OCC used
option plays in its attack, which might also come about against
Fullerton. Sophomore quarterback Nick Higgs also ran for a career-high 77
yards on 15 carries with two touchdowns.
“We have a couple of wrinkles in the (offensive) plan,” Taylor said.
“We just can’t drop back and pass the ball. We’ve had to retool the
offense.”
On the contrary to running the ball, Fullerton’s strength is its
passing game. Quarterback Brian Bartczak leads the Hornets’ big-play
offense.
Bartczak has thrown for 1,723 yards, 11 touchdowns and nine
interceptions on 112-of-215 passing, averaging 228 yards per game.
Last week, he connected with wide receiver Terrance Moore, the Mission
Conference’s yards-per-catch leader with 24 per reception. Moore had a
career day against the Rustlers, amassing 164 yards on five catches,
including touchdowns of 69 and 60 yards in the first quarter.
He has 527 yards on 22 catches (24 yards per catch) this season.
Coast’s receiving corps is led by Vince Strang, who is No. 8 in receiving
yards in the Mission Conference with 560 yards on 25. He’s just behind
Moore in the yards-per-catch category with 22 yards per reception.
“Fullerton poses different problems than Santa Ana,” Taylor said.
“They have more skill on offense. They have a great passing game.
Defensively, they’re about the same as Santa Ana, but they don’t give up
the big play.”
Taylor said he is hoping the Pirates can end the season on a high note
as there will be no postseason. Hopes of repeating as champions ended
with the 35-24 loss to rival Golden West Oct. 20 and left the Pirates
searching for what went wrong.
“It’s a wake up call for the freshmen,” Taylor said of the current
sub-.500 season. “They have to get to stronger.”
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