Little Sage about the Lightning
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Barry Faulkner
Tom Monarch pursued the Sage Hill High football coaching job
before the small private school opened in 2000 with dreams of
building a program from scratch. Two years later, he is still
relishing the task, though a largely inexperienced 30-player roster
has kept the learning curve closer to square one than the more
advanced stage more established schools, including all 10 scheduled
opponents, enjoy virtually two weeks before the season opener.
“As coaches, we have our work cut out for us,” Monarch said before
putting his team, about half of which is either new to organized
football, the school, or both, through the last of three conditioning
days Wednesday afternoon. “We have to prepare young kids to play
against varsity competition. It’s a lot different from teaching kids
who have years of youth football under their belts, or have learned
the fundamentals in a freshman program. There are some kids we’ll be
teaching how to take a three-point stance.”
Further, the Lightning will debut Sept. 13 against San Diego-based
visitor Midway Baptist, without the benefit of a scrimmage, after
plans to scrimmage another school fell through.
And, while the Lightning begin practicing in full gear today,
Monarch said he will delay full scrimmaging until Monday, to allow
his younger players to better grasp some of the game’s fundamentals.
On the positive side, Monarch has welcomed a handful of seniors,
the program’s first, who include returning quarterback and safety
Zach Friedrichs, fullback and middle linebacker Cliff Swenson and
tight end-defensive end-linebacker Scott Cho. Those standouts led the
Lightning junior varsity to a 6-2 record last fall, including a 5-0
Academy League mark to claim the league title.
The returners and the newcomers, including about 12 freshmen who
will be on the varsity -- some of whom will be required to sign
waivers of the CIF Southern Section’s minimum age requirement for
varsity competition (15) -- have been practicing once a day. They
will continue that schedule even before school starts Tuesday,
Monarch said.
With so many untested newcomers, Monarch said the formation of a
depth chart will continue right up until the Sept. 13 opener.
Monarch also said he expects at least the first two preleague
games to be used as a chemistry experiment, in regards to personnel.
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