Tars stunned, 35-28
Barry Faulkner
Fittingly, this one ended with a roar from both sides of the
stadium. But it was the players from visiting Valencia High who
hooted and high-stepped off the field Friday night after capturing a
remarkable 35-28 comeback victory in the first round of the CIF
Southern Section Division VI football playoffs at Newport Harbor
High.
The Tigers (7-4) erased a 21-0 deficit to pull even with 1:18 left
in the third quarter, then scored on both of their fourth-quarter
possessions to come away with a mildly surprising triumph.
The loss, Newport’s first in the first round since 1993, only its
second first-round defeat in 13 playoff appearances under 17-year
coach Jeff Brinkley, and the initial first-round home loss in
Brinkley’s tenure, eliminated the Sailors (7-4).
After Valencia drove 72 yards on six plays to take a 28-21 lead
with 8:29 left in the game, Newport Harbor marched 61 yards on 12
plays to tie the game with 4:51 remaining.
But Valencia, which has now won four straight first-round playoff
contests, refused to be denied.
Coach Mike Marrujo’s Tigers moved 70 yards on seven plays, the
capper a 32-yard touchdown pass up the seam from Steve Lajkowicz to
Nathan Dedic on fourth-and-three, to finalize the scoring with 59
seconds left.
Newport’s final possession ended on a 57-yard desperation bomb
from Michael McDonald to Ben Soza. Soza came down with the ball near
the sideline at the Valencia 20-yard line as time expired.
“This is the most exciting win we’ve had in a long time,” said
Marrujo, in his 22nd season at Valencia. “This win feels very good.
Our kids just didn’t want to lose.”
Newport Harbor’s quick start indicated the same, but, in the end,
the Sailors were outmuscled by the Tigers, particularly by Valencia’s
offensive line.
“They played hard and we played hard, too,” Brinkley said. “They
made plays and we didn’t. But the bottom line is that we didn’t stop
the run. Sometimes playoff games come down to the team that is
driven. (The Tigers) were very driven. They battled all the way and
we came up on the short end.”
The Sailors appeared as if they would make short work of the
Orange League runners-up, exploding for two big-play touchdowns in
the first quarter, then executing a methodical 12-play touchdown
drive to earn a 21-point cushion just more than 15 minutes elapsed in
the playoff opener.
Senior tailback Dartangan Johnson, who finished with a season-high
177 rushing yards on 24 carries, changed direction and turned the
corner for a 70-yard touchdown jaunt on the second play of Harbor’s
second possession. Joel Walker booted the first of his four
conversion kicks and the home crowd was buzzing with 5:49 left in the
first period.
After Valencia went three-and-out, Harbor needed just one play to
find the end zone, as McDonald lofted a strike to Spencer Link, who
got behind the Valencia secondary, for a 45-yard TD bomb.
Valencia punted for the third time in the opening quarter after
the ensuing kickoff and six Johnson runs, combined with a 29-yard
pass from McDonald to Mike Toole, helped Harbor move in position to
expand its lead. McDonald flipped to Johnson, whom he had just faked
the handoff to off the right side, for a 4-yard touchdown pass that
gave Newport Harbor a seemingly comfortable 21-point advantage.
Valencia fumbled the ball away on the third play of its ensuing
possession and, with just 22 offensive yards to the Tars’ 257 at that
point, appeared ready to play out the string as it regained
possession on its own 10 after a Newport punt.
But 5-foot-8 sophomore running back Rylon Thomas, who finished
with 183 rushing yards, started shuffling, then sprinting through
holes created by the Tigers’ zone blocking schemes. And Lajkowicz,
who completed 10 of 15 for 112 yards and three TDs, kept throwing
strikes to help the Tigers drive 90 yards in 15 plays to pull to
within 21-7 and salvage some momentum before halftime.
Thomas scored on a 33-yard run to cap Valencia’s first second-half
possession and Dan Desacola, who caught two TD passes, returned a
punt 59 yards make it 21-21.
Harbor amassed 419 yards total offense, to Valencia’s 345, and
Harbor won the turnover battle, 2-1.
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