Sea Kings prepare for aerial assault
Barry Faulkner
Corona del Mar High football coach Dick Freeman is hoping for an
extended jam session Saturday, when the Sea Kings visit pass-happy
Calvary Chapel in a 7 p.m. battle of Pacific Coast League unbeatens
at Westminster High.
Freeman’s plan has nothing to do with music, but rather the
ability of his secondary to bump and disrupt Eagle receivers, who
will try to blanket the field as part of Orange County’s preeminent
prep passing attack.
“I’ve never seen an offense like this,” Freeman, in his 26th
season of prep coaching, said of the aptly named Eagles, who have
amassed 82.5% of their 2,757 offensive yards through the air, almost
all of which coming from the right arm of 6-foot-4, 225-pound senior
quarterback Todd Mermer.
Mermer, whose performance the last two seasons has been enough to
send any defensive coordinator’s heart aflutter, has already broken
the school single-season record for passing yards he set last fall.
Mermer has completed 157 of 259 passes for 2,250 yards and 21
touchdowns, with eight interceptions this season. His two-year totals
include 321 completions in 558 attempts, 4,493 yards, 37 TDs and 18
interceptions. Mermer’s 507 passing yards in a PCL-opening 41-40 win
over Laguna Beach was the second-best single-game total in county
history. Only Bolsa Grande’s Doug Baughman (556 yards in a 1996 game
against La Quinta) threw for more yards in a single game.
“(Mermer) is like nine feet tall and he really zings the ball
downfield,” Freeman, the Sea Kings’ defensive coordinator, said. “He
hits guys who, by high school standards, aren’t open. We’ve seen guys
on tape who are covered, but he hits them anyway. You have to have
NFL coverage on their receivers, or be ready to knock the ball away.
He threw a ball against Laguna that was in the air so long, it had
stewardesses on it.”
Freeman believes the key to his pass defense will not occur at the
end of passing routes, but at the beginning.
“La Habra did a good job throwing the ball against us (267 yards
and three TDs). But, after the game, we pointed out to our kids that
if they bumped the receiver before he got into his route, he would
not be where the ball was going. If you jam the receiver effectively,
it doesn’t matter who the quarterback is, because if the receivers
aren’t where they’re supposed to be, it messes the whole thing up.”
Making matters more interesting, Calvary Chapel (4-3, 2-0 in
league) revved up its rushing game in last week’s 41-7 win over
Tesoro. The Eagles, who had just 315 rushing yards the first six
games, produced 202 yards on the ground against the Titans.
“They’ve had a different kid running the ball in the last two
weeks and they’ve done a decent job (on the ground),” Freeman said.
Junior Garrett Brietfuss had 111 rushing yards on 10 carries last
week, while Robby Perez leads the team with 281 rushing yards.
Freeman said he may shift his outside linebackers to end and move
his ends inside to the tackle spots, in hopes of improving his
defense’s quickness.
He said applying pressure on Mermer will be a must, but Mermer’s
almost exclusive alignment in the shotgun can make blitzes
problematic.
“I’m not sure if our regular front four can do it,” Freeman said
of his desired pass rush. “We’re going to have to send somebody else.
But when teams have sent linebackers, he has done a good job of
reading that and picking them apart.”
As potent as the Calvary offense has been, upping its per-game
average to nearly 28 points by scoring 82 points in two league wins,
the Eagles have been outscored this season, 237-195.
CdM’s 33 points against Laguna Beach last week were its
second-best single-game output of the season, just missing a 35-point
effort in the opener against Costa Mesa.
The Sea Kings (4-3, 2-0), ranked No. 6 in CIF Southern Section
Division IX, led, 13-0, in the first 43 seconds against the Breakers
and were up, 26-0, before 11 minutes had elapsed.
CdM’s offense has been paced by senior tailback Mark Cianciulli,
who has collected 847 rushing yards and nine TDs on 176 carries.
Cianciulli’s fifth 100-plus rushing performance of the season last
week enabled him to move into No. 2 on the school’s all-time rushing
list with 2,296 yards. He is still 893 yards from eclipsing CdM
career rushing leader J.R. Walz, who set the standard from 1991-93.
Senior quarterback Jonathan Hubbard has thrown for 552 yards and
five TDs this fall and is 8 of 10 for 172 yards and one TD, without
an interception, the last two games.
CdM’s leading receiver is sophomore Kevin Welch, who has 16
catches for 283 yards and four TDs.
A CdM win would create a probable league title showdown Nov. 8
against defending league champion Northwood (6-1, 2-0), which hosts
Laguna Beach Friday.
This is the first meeting between CdM and Calvary Chapel.
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