CdM sees return on investment
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Barry Faulkner
The Corona del Mar High players pumped their fists, raised their
helmets, howled at the moon and appeared to thoroughly savor the Sea
Kings’ crucial Pacific Coast League-opening 14-13 football victory
over University Thursday night at Newport Harbor High.
Meanwhile, most of the CdM coaches quivered with emotion, slumped
from exhaustion and wondered how it would look if they called in
spent for work Friday, after having emphasized to their players the
importance of not shirking their 8 a.m. classes.
CdM Coach Dick Freeman looked as if he’d played the hard-fought
contest, in which momentum swings appeared to shift, or at least
threaten to shift, with seemingly every series, if not from play to
play.
“The excitement is what draws us to coaching,” Freeman said
Sunday, after a few days to recharge the batteries and begin
preparation for Friday’s PCL clash at Laguna Beach. “All of our
coaches really like the game and they invest a lot into it. It’s only
natural the emotions come out on game nights.”
Freeman said he has become better at masking his emotions on the
sideline, but that does not mean he experiences them any less.
Offensive Coordinator Ed Blanton, observing the game from the
press box, is not as difficult to read as his head coach. Blanton
shouted and swayed, cajoled and cringed with each of the accidents,
either happy or horrific, that affected the Sea Kings’ fortunes
against the Trojans.
So too, CdM fans groaned and gasped, sighed, shuddered and
screamed as the two teams battled for possession of the ball and the
coveted victory.
Often the reversal of fortune was abrupt, as with the game’s
turning point when Kris Cooper fell on a Uni fumble the first play
after the Trojans appeared to deflate the CdM sail, converting a
fourth-and-one set up by a mindless personal foul penalty on a punt
that would have given CdM field position near midfield, trailing,
13-7.
A holding penalty two plays into CdM’s ensuing possession
threatened to scuttle the comeback opportunity, until quarterback
Jonathan Hubbard, who completed all five of his passes, arched a
spiral to Kevin Welch for 42 yards and a first down at the Uni
14-yard line.
Five plays later, Mark Cianciulli leaped across the goal line to
tie the game and David Del Fante kicked the conversion to finalize
the score with 58 seconds left in the third quarter.
The game was far from decided, of course, as drama continued to
build until Uni’s desperation long pass, though complete, came up
short at the CdM 11 as time expired.
CdM twice fumbled the ball away and lost the ball twice more,
though both plays were whistled dead to negate Uni recoveries.
CdM had two apparent interceptions fall through defenders’ hands
and scrambled in vain to recover three Uni fumbles, some of which
were up for grabs long enough to create a wave of audible
anticipation from the CdM faithful, before being scooped up by
Trojans.
“We just didn’t do enough bad stuff to lose,” summarized Freeman,
who had seen his team squander away previous chances in the
three-game losing streak that preceded Thursday’s win.
Freeman said the good fortune came none too soon for his
hard-working team, which carried great expectations into the season.
“These guys have put a lot of work into this thing, so they
deserve to see some good come from it,” Freeman said. “This one kind
of validated all that work. If you’re not winning, sometimes you
start questioning whether or not you can. This should help our guys’
confidence.”
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