Daily Pilot Football Player of the Week: Brian Gaeta
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Barry Faulkner
There was no athletic guidance counselor steering him away from the
rigors of the sport, but Newport Harbor High senior Brian Geata can’t say
his body hasn’t dropped a few hints that it would prefer shin guards and
knee pads to a helmet and shoulder pads.
Yet, rather than listen to feedback received in the form of painful
knee and ankle problems, or the well-meaning advice of those who simply
don’t understand, it is Gaeta’s heart and soul which have led him to his
personal sporting truth.
For this former three-sport athlete, for whom stardom was projected in
soccer and volleyball, football has become his love.
“When I was a freshman at Edison, (Chargers varsity football) coach
Dave White said football would become my niche,” Gaeta said. “At the
time, I didn’t really think it would, but, after last season, I fell in
love with it. I think it brings out the best in me as an athlete and as a
competitor.”
Few courtships, however, have endured such rocky starts.
Playing through tendinitis in both knees, Gaeta caught 62 passes,
third-best in the program’s single-season annals, and had six
interceptions, en route to All-Sea View League and All-Newport-Mesa
District recognition.
But, not long after the Sailors lost to Irvine in their second
consecutive CIF Southern Section Division VI title game -- Gaeta’s two
field goals of 38 and 36 yards helped the Tars win the 1999 final against
Irvine -- He underwent surgery in both knees to try to correct problems
with patellar tendon irritation.
Still recovering from those surgeries, which sidelined him for the
entire volleyball season, Gaeta ruptured ligaments in an ankle early in
the Tars’ season opener against Orange Lutheran.
What followed was agonizing weeks of rehabilitation that did not
compare to the discomfort he experienced watching from the sideline as
his senior season slipped away.
“It was the most painful experience of my life,” Gaeta said. “To have
to sit and watch your best buddies playing their senior year and not be
able to be out there with them ... “
Gaeta finally returned in Week 7 against Laguna Hills, but it wasn’t
until the final week of the regular season that he displayed the type of
two-way presence he did last fall.
“(Friday’s nonleague game against Westchester) was kind of my
coming-out party,” said the Daily Pilot Player of the Week, who caught
eight passes for 135 yards and one touchdown and also played well on
defense. “I felt good mentally and physically.”
At 6-foot-3, 195 pounds, Gaeta provides a rare physical presence on
the perimeter, even more so after adding nearly 20 pounds of muscle last
offseason.
“I have really noticed the difference,” Gaeta said of his enhanced
strength. “It has helped a lot in man-to-man coverage. It’s much easier
to separate at the line, and also when the ball is in the air.”
A self-described possession receiver, Gaeta’s ability to separate
helps make him a valued option for two-year starting quarterback Morgan
Craig.
But Gaeta’s ability to get open also has to do with the precision
route running Harbor receivers have come to be known for.
Gaeta also credits Craig for his 79 career receptions, which rank
fourth on the Sailors’ all-time list (he needs 14 to pass George
Greenwalt at No. 3, while Danny Pulido (142) and Mark Craig (131) appear
out of reach.
“Morgan is throwing the ball great this year and I thought he threw
the ball well last year, too,” Gaeta said. “We have a very good
relationship and he puts the ball in a good spot all the time.”
Gaeta is now back in his preferred spot -- starting at receiver and
cornerback -- and he’s looking forward to helping the Tars make a run a
their third straight CIF title game.
“Having him back has been a real positive,” Newport Coach Jeff
Brinkley said. “He caught the ball real well the other night and the kids
definitely look to him as a leader.”
Gaeta said he tried to contribute leadership while rehabilitating his
ankle injury and noted his unexpected stint as an “assistant coach”
helped him ease the torture of not competing.
He hopes to compete at the collegiate level and reports recruiting
interest from Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, the University of San Diego and
Ivy League schools, including Dartmouth.
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