Pirates hope to set new trend
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Steve Virgen
Most of the sophomores on the Orange Coast College football team
remember last year’s game against Los Angeles Harbor. They remember
that the Pirates came off a victory the previous week, but then
dropped a 35-29 loss to the Seahawks at OCC, in a game that included
five turnovers by the Pirates. The game was four days after the Sept.
11 terrorists attacks on America.
OCC gave up 298 passing yards, and after two games the Pirates had
allowed 690 yards through the air and four touchdowns. But, this
year’s Bucs appear to be a different story, and a different team.
OCC Coach Mike Taylor has spent the week motivating his players
for the upcoming game tonight at 7 at L.A. Harbor. He wants the
Pirates to cut down on penalties and he wants his squad to respond to
the challenge of playing on the road.
In addition, Taylor is interested in seeing how the Pirates
respond to its recent Southern California ranking. Coast, which was
unranked in the preseason, shot up to No. 14 in the recent Southern
California Community College Football Poll. Last week, OCC delivered
a dominating effort in a 28-11 victory over visiting East L.A.
“We’re trying to keep everything in perspective,” Taylor said.
“L.A. Harbor is a tougher challenge (than East L.A.). They lost last
week at San Diego Mesa. They’ll be hungry to win. We need to be able
to accept the challenge.”
According to the school’s statistics, OCC sophomore tailback Niles
Mittasch and freshman tailback Steven Mahelona ran for 126 yards and
104, respectively. That’s the first time the Bucs have had two
100-yard rushers in a game since the 1996 season when Chet Walker and
William League combined for 248 against Rancho Santiago.
Taylor expects the Seahawks will be ready for OCC’s running
attack. He also expects sophomore quarterback Jason Kripavicius and a
young Coast receiving group to take advantage of what should be
man-to-man coverage.
Last week, the Pirates had two Kripavicius touchdown passes called
back because of penalties. Both passes were caught in the end zone by
freshman Coleman Menke. Menke caught a 20-yarder, but that was called
back on his offensive pass interference penalty. Then, Menke had an
8-yard TD reception called back because of an illegal procedure
penalty.
“We want to be more efficient on offense,” Taylor said. “Teams are
going to figure us out and load up against the run. I would like to
see Krip to have a little bit of a breakout game. I want to see him
double his yardage from last week. I think, as an offensive group,
we’re confident in that people have to stop us.”
Even though the Seahawks had success through the air last year,
Taylor expects Harbor to run at the OCC defense, which had a standout
showing in the opener last week.
The Pirates recorded two fumble recoveries, two sacks and held
East L.A. to 81 rushing yards (24 came on one touchdown run). At
halftime, when the Bucs led 21-0, the OCC defense allowed just 45 net
yards, including only two rushing yards.
L.A. Harbor still has a vaunted passing game led by returning
sophomore wide receiver Chris Christopher who had five catches for
110 yards and a touchdown last year.
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