Tars roll on, 35-14
Barry Faulkner
The suspense lasted slightly longer than the Woodbridge lead. But,
in the end, Newport Harbor’s 35-14 Sea View League football victory
over the host Warriors Thursday at Irvine High amounted to about what
most Sailor rooters figured the first nine weeks of the season would
be: a prelude to a league title showdown with Foothill Thursday at
Tustin High.
A win over Foothill would give the defending league champion
Sailors (7-2, 3-1 in league), ranked No. 6 in CIF Southern Section
Division VI, at least a share of the league crown. Should Foothill
knock off Irvine tonight, a Newport win next week would give the Tars
a co-title and the league’s No. 1 playoff berth.
Woodbridge (1-8, 0-4) went 75 yards on 11 plays with the opening
kickoff, aided by a key fourth-down conversion on a fake punt pass,
to take a 7-0 lead with 8:18 left in the first quarter.
But if the Sailors’ defense was, in Newport Harbor Coach Jeff
Brinkley terminology “flat-footed,” the visitors’ offense appeared
willing and able to deliver a swift kick to his team’s momentum.
“I don’t know if it was being a Thursday night or what, but it was
a very weird feeling out here in pregame,” Brinkley said. “I told the
coaching staff, we needed to get some emotion going.”
Newport Harbor senior quarterback Michael McDonald and senior
tailback Dartangan Johnson appeared to have all the emotion they
needed, and they wasted little time sharing their sense of urgency.
On Harbor’s third snap, McDonald flipped to Johnson in the flat,
where he collected the ball, turned the corner and sprinted down the
sideline for a 74-yard touchdown.
Joel Walker’s conversion kick erased a Warriors’ lead that lasted
all of 65 seconds and the Sailors were on their way to 35 straight
points, before ushering on the subs with more than a quarter
remaining.
“This was our league title game, because, if we didn’t win this
one, we wouldn’t be playing for the league title next week,” said
McDonald, who threw for 139 yards and two touchdowns and added a
career-high 104 rushing yards on just six carries, including scoring
scampers of 4 and 1 yards. McDonald, who completed 9 of 18 passes,
but had four would-be completions dropped by receivers, also threw a
two-point conversion pass to Taylor Young.
Johnson whose 8-yard scoring run with 4:27 left in the third
quarter put an exclamation point on Newport’s efficient offensive
performance, rushed for 135 yards on 23 carries. It was his seventh
straight game of at least 100 rushing yards, upping his school career
record of 100-yard games to 16. Johnson went over the 1,000-yard
plateau for the second straight season (1,070) and upped his school
career-record rushing total to 3,075. He is only the sixth player in
Newport-Mesa history to rush for at least 3,000 yards.
While the offense scored on four of its first five possessions,
the Newport defense settled down, as well. The Sailors forced the
Warriors into eight punts and senior cornerback Ben Soza intercepted
a long pass in the end zone to halt another Woodbridge possession.
Senior tackle Chase Brawner was in on two quarterback sacks, among
nine stops behind the line by Sailor tacklers. Newport also stuffed
one running play for no gain and surrendered only 1 yard on five
other rushing attempts.
After Oermann had runs of 15 and 20 yards on the opening series,
the Warriors’ final 20 rushing plays gained just 35 yards.
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