Leading the charge
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Bryce Alderton
When Dartangan Johnson walks into LeBard Stadium wearing a Santa Ana
College uniform for Saturday night’s Mission Conference matchup with
host Orange Coast, he will be thinking about former teammates and
friends he met while starring at Newport Harbor High and the three
games he has already played there. He will probably talk to them
before the game during warmups and exchange a smile or two.
But that is where the pleasantries end. Once the whistle blows for
the 6 p.m. kickoff, Newport Harbor’s career rushing leader has one
goal on his mind: winning.
“I know some of the Coast players and some are old friends,”
Johnson said. “I look at it like every other game. I am not going to
take it easy on them.”
Johnson, twice the Newport-Mesa Offensive Player of the Year as a
tailback who gained 3,397 yards on 560 carries as a Sailor, has
hardly let up for the Dons, who are off to their best start in 14
years at 4-0.
The 6-foot-1, 200-pound back leads the conference in rushing,
having gained 660 yards on 139 carries through four games, nearly 5
yards a carry and good for a 165-yard average per game. He also leads
the conference in all-purpose running with 708 yards and has scored
six touchdowns.
“I have a great [offensive] line,” Johnson said when asked what
has led to his and the Dons’ early season success. “They open holes
and that makes me happy.”
He should be familiar with two players on the line since they went
to the same high school. Freshmen tackles A.J. Slater and Chris
Badorek earned first- and second-team team All-Sea View League
recognition, respectively, last season as tackles. They join a line
that provides running room for another Newport Harbor alum, 6-1,
255-pound fullback Travis Trimble, who is playing his sophomore
season after missing 2002 following knee surgery. Trimble played for
Coast two years ago.
Johnson has already set a Santa Ana record for most carries in a
game with 40 in a 16-13 win two weeks ago against Long Beach,
breaking Brandon Fischer’s mark of 37 set two years ago.
“I didn’t know I had that many carries,” Johnson said. “I guess it
is a good accomplishment, but I didn’t expect to do it.”
Johnson did know he would get the ball a lot this season. His
coaches made that clear early on.
“I wouldn’t mind Dartangan getting the ball every single play, but
he wouldn’t hold up,” Santa Ana head coach Geoff Jones said.
“[Community college football] is on a different level. He would get
smacked and we can’t have that happen.”
With quicker and stronger defenders, Johnson, who also holds the
Newport record with 18 games of at least 100 rushing yards, said the
yards are even tougher to come by than in high school.
“You have to work a lot harder,” he said. “Everyone that plays at
this level can hit. You have to deliver the blow instead of receiving
it.”
That aggressive running caught Jones’ eye.
“He finishes every single run,” Jones said. “He is clawing and
scratching, getting whatever he can. He has an unbelievable work
ethic and his attitude sets him apart.
“I think we knew exactly what we had. [The tailback] position
needed the most upgrading. He is one of he best guys we’ve had in a
long time.”
Heading into spring practice, Jones thought Johnson ran a certain
way, but was shown differently.
“We thought he was more of a slasher, but realized he is a power
back that can make you miss and he likes to run over people,” Jones
said.
Contrary to high school, when he started at cornerback, Johnson
can concentrate solely on running this fall.
“It makes it a lot easier,” Johnson said. “I don’t have to switch
back and forth between defensive and offensive modes. It is better to
do one thing.”
Jones compared Johnson to former Santa Ana tailback Estrus
Clayton, who holds school career records for rushing touchdowns (34),
all-purpose yards (4,062), touchdowns (42) and points (264).
“Clayton is considered the best tailback in Santa Ana history, but
he was kind of a slasher,” Jones said. “No one touched him and he
made you miss. Physically he looks like Dartangan.”
With the fast start, Johnson inches ever closer to Clayton’s
records. But he isn’t focused on individual accolades.
“I want to take the team as far as it can go and do my part to win
a championship,” Johnson said.
“We have better players this year,” Jones said when asked the
reason for the turnaround from the 2-8 campaign a year ago.
Johnson is one of those key ingredients.
“He has been a dream,” Jones said.
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