Irvine exploits cracks
Barry Faulkner
The stars aligned for Irvine High’s Terrell Vinson in the
Vaqueros’ 28-20 Sea View League victory Thursday, as the senior
running back amassed 309 yards on 28 carries, including touchdown
runs of 94 and 65 yards.
But Vinson’s unprecedented success against a Newport Harbor
defense, at least during the 17-year tenure of Coach Jeff Brinkley,
had something to do with the Sailor defenders’ inability to maintain
proper alignment.
“It was a combination of everything,” Brinkley said of Vinson’s
heroics, which also included a 32-yard touchdown reception and 362
all-purpose yards. “We got ourselves out of position more than we’d
like to and he’s a good back. We’re a gap defense and any time we’re
not in the right gaps, something bad is going to happen.”
Newport Harbor’s defense, perennially strong against the run, had
surrendered just 590 rushing yards the first six games this fall.
With Vinson on the loose, however, Irvine piled up 359 rushing yards,
allowing them to overcome a strong offensive performance by the
Sailors.
“Offensively, we played very well,” Brinkley said. “Dartangan
Johnson (175 yards and two touchdowns on 27 carries) played very
well. We couldn’t have asked more from him with the way he ran the
football. It was unfortunate we got ourselves in a chase position in
the second half, so we had to try to score a little more quickly than
we’re used to. We couldn’t run (Johnson) as much in the second half
(eight carries for 23 yards).
“(Senior quarterback Michael) McDonald threw the ball well, too
(15 of 26 for 196 yards, just 5 fewer than his career single-game
best, with one TD and no interceptions).”
The Sailors’ three first-half drives consumed 16 plays (leading to
a missed 22-yard field goal), seven plays and 11 plays, the latter
two resulting in touchdown marches of 65 and 78 yards.
Vinson had also yet to explode before intermission, with only 43
yards on nine carries, including only one of more than 8 yards, a
13-yard pickup.
But Vinson, who had 92 rushing yards on 20 carries as a junior
against Newport, wasted little time getting things rolling in the
third quarter. He burst 65 yards to the end zone on the third play
after halftime, then, following Harbor’s only three-and-out, went 94
yards for a TD on the third play of Irvine’s second possession.
Vinson added runs of 28 and 29 yards to help Irvine (5-2, 2-0 in
league) pull off the upset and force the Sailors (5-2, 1-1) into
catch-up mode if they want to defend their league crown.
To get an idea of how prolific Vinson’s effort was, consider it
had been 71 games since any team posted 300 rushing yards against
Newport Harbor.
Santa Margarita’s Billy Newman went for 252 yards on 20 carries in
a 35-0 defeat of Harbor in the 1996 CIF Southern Section Division VI
title game, after piling up 264 rushing yards on 28 carries in the
regular-season meeting with the Tars that same year.
Since then, the same span of 71 games, only one runner, Cerritos
quarterback Tim Austin (201 yards in last year’s CIF Division VI
quarterfinal loss to Newport) had surpassed the 200-yard plateau on
the ground.
This season, only Trabuco Hills, a 16-8 winner in the season
opener, had posted at least 300 yards total offense (312) and the
five opponents between Trabuco and Irvine totaled only 410 combined
rushing yards.
One would need to look back to the 1997 season to find a team with
at least 300 passing yards against Harbor. Santa Margarita’s Carson
Palmer, currently shredding Pac-10 secondaries for USC, threw for 354
yards in a regular-season win over the Tars, then helped (with 279
yards) Santa Margarita throw for 319 yards in a CIF Division VI
semifinal victory later the same season.
“We’ve never had one guy go out there and control the offense like
that against us,” Brinkley said of Vinson. “Any time we’ve come up
against a team that is one-dimensional, we’ve always done a good job
(defensively).”
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