First-round knockout a shocker
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Jaws dropped, tears welled and stomachs turned around the
Newport-Mesa prep football community Friday night, as the season came
to a sudden, surprising and dramatic end for Corona del Mar, Costa
Mesa and Newport Harbor.
All three teams saw their CIF Southern Section first-round playoff
opponents produce game-winning scores in the final minute. All three
locals held fourth-quarter leads and all but CdM were favored to
advance to this week’s quarterfinals.
The reality, no doubt, continues to sink in for players, who,
instead of practicing Monday, turned in their gear. Most of the
seniors will never buckle a chin strap again.
Coaches spent the weekend wrestling with regret, wondering what
detail they may have altered to affect a different outcome.
While depressing for fans, family and friends, no one can know the
depth of disappointment brought on by season-ending losses for those
involved in the program.
As one who spends a little more than 25% of his annual working
hours covering football, I am constantly reminded how passionate,
myopic and subjective football coaches and players become about their
teams. It is, perhaps, a creation of the preparation-to-performance
ratio of about five days to one that occurs during the season. There
is also the virtual nine-month offseason that includes the rituals of
weightlifting, spring practice, summer passing leagues and fall
two-a-days.
The passion was tangible on the Newport Harbor sideline in the
waning seconds of the Sailors’ first first-round exit since 1993.
Senior lineman Tommy Carroll screamed through his facemask to his
teammates on the field as they tried to cover the 80 or so yards
separating the Sailors from elimination. It wasn’t words of
encouragement, so much as a plea for survival, delivered so
forcefully, it buckled his body at the waist.
Newport quarterback Michael McDonald completed a desperation pass
covering 57 yards to Alex Orth, evoking a loud roar of hope from the
Newport Harbor stands. But the euphoria evaporated quickly as eyes
averted to the scoreboard, where the final seconds had escaped,
taking with them the last remnants of the promise with which every
season begins.
Newport Harbor Coach Jeff Brinkley, as well as Corona del Mar head
man Dick Freeman, talked about the emptiness that followed.
“Our program has evolved to the point where expectations are so
high (five trips to a section title game and two more to the
semifinals in the last 11 years), not be out there practicing on
Thanksgiving is an odd feeling for all of us,” Brinkley said.
Brinkley also said consolation was difficult to convey after
Friday’s loss.
“Everyone, the players included, measure themselves off of past
successes. The bar is set pretty high around here and when (an
extended playoff run) doesn’t happen, people tend to feel
disappointed.”
Freeman said people can’t understand the depth of emotion created
by a season-ending loss.
“Every week, our kids put themselves out there,” Freeman said.
“It’s a little bit like an actor in a play. They sell out every week,
putting forth whatever they can, just competing. As a high school
kid, our guys put in close to a 40-hour week for something that
culminates in a 2 1/2-hour struggle, and the goal is to come out on
top. When you don’t win games, it’s one thing, then to not win a
league championship is another level. Then, to not move on in the
playoffs, that’s a big disappointment.”
Brinkley said winning and losing affects coaches differently than
the kids, though no less intensely.
“The losses certainly eat at you more than you enjoy the wins,”
Brinkley said. “Anymore, we expect to be successful. I answered the
phone at home Sunday saying ‘Football,’ because I’m so used to being
in my office preparing. I now have a lot more free time than I’m used
to this time of year.”
Brinkley said he dreamed about the game Friday and Saturday night
and he awoke Saturday and Sunday thinking about things he may have
done differently.”
“This one will eat at us for a long time,” he said.
*
Costa Mesa’s early exit in Division VII, as well as first-round
losses by fellow Golden West League entries Orange and Santa Ana,
won’t help create favorable playoff pairings for the circuit next
fall.
*
Three Sea View League teams also were defeated in the first round,
the first time that has happened since 1993. The league’s sole
survivor, league champion Foothill, will need to win out for the
league to avoid its first collective losing postseason since 1986.
*
As part of its pairings process, the four-member pairings
committee ranked leagues in all divisions according to perceived
strength.
In Division VI, the Sea View was ranked No. 2, behind the
Miramonte and ahead of, in descending order, the Suburban, Century
and Empire leagues.
In Division IX, the Pacific Coast League, which went 1-3 in the
first round, was ranked No. 3. The Freeway and Valle Vista leagues
were Nos.1 and 2, respectively, with the Orange at No. 4 and the
Garden Grove No. 5.
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