Options kept open for Sea King offense
Rick Devereux
The Corona del Mar High football team had produced a 1,000 rusher
from 1995-2002 before last year when Austin Brawner led the Sea Kings
with 554 yards on 137 carries with six touchdowns.
Collectively, the offense gained 1,571 yards on the ground, with
the bulk coming from Brawner, Wess Presson (91 carries for 407 yards,
five touchdowns) and Brett Crowley (79-382, one score).
The yards could be divided even more with the implementation of
the option.
“We ran a little bit of the option last year,” coach Dick Freeman
said. “Our quarterbacks are still trying to understand the little
things about the option. It’s something you need to do all the time
in order to get comfortable.”
Even with the run-oriented option, Freeman said the offense will
throw more than in the past.
“[Defenses] won’t line up nine [near the line of scrimmage]on us,”
Freeman said. “We played nine-man fronts every week last year.
Defenses can’t go one-on-one on us with our receiving corps, so I’m
thinking we won’t see as many nine-man fronts.”
The top returning receiver will be Kevin Welch, who has earned
all-league honors two consecutive seasons.
Another key All-Sea View League returner is defensive lineman Matt
Burgner. The junior defensive end was a first-team all-league
selection as a sophomore, racking up 35 tackles, eight sacks and two
fumble recoveries.
“Matt is probably as good a guy coming back from last year as
there is in the league on defense,” Freeman said. “He did it all as a
sophomore.”
Here is a look at the Corona del Mar position-by-position
breakdown:
Quarterback: Senior Tom Welch will return as the starter, with
juniors Shaun Mohler and Collin Wigely as the backups. Freeman said
all three have been practicing the option and done well, but Welch
will be the main signal caller after finishing with an 11-5,
touchdown to interception ratio and 19.7 yards per completion. Welch
(6-foot-1, 190 pounds) averaged 3.4 yards per carry last year and
added three rushing touchdowns.
“I think that his major strength is that he is a good runner, he’s
a good athlete and he’s worked on his throwing,” Freeman said. “He
doesn’t have a rocket arm, but he’s good at the short-to-intermediate
passes.”
Running backs: The Greek version of a three-headed monster was
Cerberus, the dog that guarded the entrance to Hades. The Corona del
Mar version of a three-headed monster is Brawner-Presson-Crowley, the
two seniors and junior, respectively, that will handle the ground
attack for the Sea Kings.
“With three really good guys at running back, our problem is
spreading it out to all three of them,” Freeman said. “None will
carry the ball 30 times, but they could get about 15 carries each.
They need to do what they can with the 15 that the get.”
Presson (6-0, 195) and Crowley (5-11, 180) have the ability to cut
back and make defenders miss, whereas Brawner (5-11, 180) would
rather run over a would-be-tackler, Freeman said.
The fullback will be Taylor Meehan, a 6-2, 218-pound senior
transfer from Utah that Freeman said loves to hit.
Receivers: Kevin Welch has added 10 pounds to his 6-2 frame from
last year tipping the scales at 205 pounds, but Freeman said the
added muscle hasn’t slowed the senior’s skills.
“Kevin does a lot of things real well as a wide receiver,” Freeman
said. “He has great hands, great leaping ability and good ball
sense.”
The two-year starter has been a model of consistency for the Sea
Kings. He has 55 receptions for 1,237 yards with 15 touchdowns over
his career.
The other wide out position was going to be filled by either
seniors Shane Collins or Matt Busch, but Busch hurt his shoulder and
Collins suffered a hip flexor. David Del Fante, Matt Silva, Paul
McGovern, Steve Hillgren and Hunt Rychel are expected to fill in
until Collins and Busch return in the near future.
Tight ends: Tyler Lance had seven receptions for 161 yards last
year at tight end, but Freeman said he wants to utilize the position
more in the passing game.
Corona del Mar doesn’t use a two-tight end formation often, so
Avery Fenton will mostly be used as the back up tight end to give
Lance a breather or in case he is injured.
Offensive line: Four of the five starters from last year return,
but the loss of all-league left tackle Andy Lujan to graduation is a
sizable hole to fill.
Tackle John Fairbanks (6-4, 240) center Chris Reilly (6-2, 215)
and guards Zach Wishengred (6-0, 215) and Andrew Kiliglan (5-11, 240)
will provide experience and size to the line while Robby Richey (6-3,
270) learns the left tackle position.
Taylor Storm, John Joyce and Taylor Paselk will provide depth at
tackle and Brent Ogden and Arion Lapuz will fill-in in the interior
positions
Defensive line: Consistency on the defensive line parallels that
on the offensive front with only last year’s starting defensive end
Brian Dunn graduated. Fairbanks and Fenton (6-3, 220) are back to
clog up the middle as the defensive tackles and Burgner (6-0, 200)
and is back at one defensive end. Carlos Corrales (6-3, 200) will
replace Dunn at the other end.
Freeman said the strength of the line will be its quickness as
opposed to brute strength, signaling our Burgner as a catalyst for
creating chaos in the backfield.
“He’s not nine feet tall throwing guys around like a rag doll,”
Freeman said, “but the other team is going to have to pay attention
to him if they run toward him. They’re going to have to do something
to try to stop him.”
Richey and Storm are the backups for the interior, and Paselk and
Glenn Smith are at the end spots.
Linebackers: The Sea Kings run a 4-2-5 defense, and John Shanahan
(5-7, 170) and Mohler (6-3, 200) were the starters last year. Meehan
figures to push both for playing time with Mike Peters (5-11, 195)
and serving as a backup.
Secondary: The reason why Freeman runs a nickel package is to take
advantage of the team speed on defense. Last year the team picked off
14 passes and allowed 7.4 yards per pass attempt.
The starting corners are Del Fante and Matt Loyd. Busch, Lance and
Brawner will be the three main players at the two outside safety
spots and Kevin Welch will return as the starting free safety.
“Kevin plays the ball in air well and is real good versus the
run,” Freeman said. “Overall, our team speed is a major strength of
the defense. We’re not real deep but we have some good ones, though.”
Tom Welch and Matt Silva are the back up corners, Rychel, Crowley
and Tommy Folks will provide depth to the safety position, and
Presson and Rychel backup the free safety spot.
Kicking game: Junior Andrew Hummel will handle the field goal and
point after touchdown duties. Del Fante, who kicked a 36-yard field
goal and converted 18 PATs last year, will be the emergency kicker if
anything happens to Hummel.
Freeman said the team might not punt this year, but Presson or
Kevin Welch could handle the job if called upon.
Freeman was said he was confident in the return game because of
the team speed. Collins was slated as a return man, but his hip
injury will keep him off the field for a few weeks. Presson and Loyd
will handle the returns, and Freeman said other skill players also
have a shot at receiving kickoffs and punts.
“I feel pretty good [with the returns],” Freeman said. “We have a
lot of young, skilled guys that can do it.”
Fenton will be the long snapper.
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