Prep football: Tars up to speed?
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Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - The Newport Harbor High football team is hoping to
end the unprecedented season visiting Cerritos has already achieved when
the two teams collide Friday at 7 p.m. in a CIF Southern Section Division
VI quarterfinal.
Coach Kurt Bruich’s Dons (9-1), tri-champions of the Suburban League,
had never before finished atop the league standings. Cerritos advanced
last week with a 42-7 first-round thumping of Loara, in which the Dons
scored on their first six possessions and led, 35-0, after one quarter.
The Dons are averaging nearly 35 points per game and have twice scored in
the 50s, with a high of 57.
The No. 3-seeded Sailors (9-1-1) are much more familiar with success,
having reached the division title game five times in the previous nine
years, including CIF championships in 1994 and 1999.
The Sailors, 24-9 in the playoffs under 16-year coach Jeff Brinkley
(20-5 since 1992, including a 6-0 mark in quarterfinals), hope that
experience can counteract the team speed that sets Cerritos apart among
Division VI schools.
“If you were look at our team, the first thing you’d notice is our
speed,” said Bruich, the son of San Bernardino County all-time coaching
victories leader and former Fontana High head man Dick Bruich. “We have
four receivers who all run under 11 seconds in the 100 meters.”
Newport Harbor had problems with Westchester’s speed, which helped the
Comets earn a 26-22 nonleague win in the regular-season finale.
Brinkley, however, believes the Westchester game will help the Tars
step up to the challenge the Dons will present.
“Playing Westchester was a bonus for us (in preparing) for this game,”
Brinkley said. “We found out that we can play with athletes and we
certainly believe that across the board, we should have won that
(Westchester) game. Knowing we lined up with Westchester very tough,
should give our guys a lot of confidence.”
Confidence is something the Dons have acquired, outscoring teams an
average of around 35-10 this fall, including a 28-17 triumph over La
Mirada, ranked No. 1 in Division VI at the time.
“You can tell they know how to win,” Brinkley said. “They’re league
champs and they have to feel good about that. They’re the most talented
team we’ve played this year, including Westchester (which took a 9-1
record into Wednesday’s Los Angeles City Section semifinals).”
Bruich, in his fourth season, said the Dons have displayed very few
weaknesses.
“We’re balanced on offense and defense and we’ve been pretty good on
special teams, too,” Bruich said. “We have a special group of kids who
can run and hit and tackle.”
The Newport defense, which leads Orange County and Division VI in
fewest points allowed (80), will tackle the challenge of containing a
spread offense triggered by senior two-year starting quarterback Tim
Austin.
Austin has completed 104 of 171 passes (nearly 61%) for 1,562 yards
and 17 touchdowns, with only four interceptions. He frequently operates
out of the shotgun and Bruich said he has thrown completions to 10
different receivers.
Junior tailback Kenneth Frank scored four TDs against Loara and has
rushed for 1,208 yards on 152 carries, with 24 rushing TDs.
Senior receiver Nathan Adkins is Austin’s favorite target and has
scholarship offers from Colorado and Colorado State. He has 32 catches
for 508 yards and seven TDs and has also scored as a kick returner.
Newport has been led defensively by senior linebackers Cory Ray and
Tyler Miller, while cornerbacks Adam Kerns (five interceptions) and Brian
Gaeta, as well as junior safety Mike McDonald (four), have helped the
Tars post 17 picks, the fifth-best single-season total in school history.
Newport earned its fourth shutout in last week’s 49-point first-round
drubbing of Ocean View and is trying to become the first Harbor team in
30 years to allow fewer than 100 points in a season.
Offensively, a Newport line that averages 6-foot-5, 261 pounds from
tackle to tackle has driven a balanced attack that features senior
quarterback Morgan Craig and junior tailback Dartangan Johnson.
Johnson has carried 257 times for 1,719 yards and his five TDs against
Ocean View upped his season total to 15. His 239 rushing yards last week
were also a career high.
Craig has completed 101 of 154 (nearly 66%) for 1,327 yards and 18 TDs
and is also closing in on 400 rushing yards.
Kerns (23 catches for 508 yards and 10 TDs), Gaeta (19 for 225 yards),
McDonald (17 for 215) and Jon Vandersloot (13 for 144) have been reliable
receiving targets.
The Tars’ offensive front is led by UCLA-bound senior tackle Robert
Chai and Montana-bound senior center Jeff Marshall.
The Sailors, however, will be facing a unique defensive scheme.
“(The Dons) run a version of the Chicago Bears 46 defense, except they
bring one more,” Brinkley said. “These guys have no free safety, so you
know they’re coming after you. They bring athletes, but they can also
cover you. Hopefully, we can develop some schemes that can exploit some
of those things.”
Frank is the Dons’ “center fielder” on defense, while Austin and
Adkins are additional members of the secondary. Jonathan Mitchell, a 6-0,
230 linebacker, is another defensive stalwart for Cerritos.
The winner of Friday’s game, the first ever between the two schools,
will advance to meet the Foothill-La Mirada winner in a Dec. 1 semifinal.
If Newport wins, it’s seventh semifinal appearance in 10 years would be
on the road.
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