Sailors gave all they had
Rick Devereux
For Newport Harbor High football Coach Jeff Brinkley, there are no
regrets, there are no doubts, there are no what-ifs.
“Every year we want to get these guys to maximize their
potential,” he said. “[The final record] may be 12-1-1 or 7-4. I think [this year’s players] took this as long as they could and
performed at the best of their abilities.”
The Sailors (12-1-1) suffered their first loss of the season in
the CIF Southern Section Division VI championship game Saturday to
top-seeded Orange Lutheran. The 35-6 setback was the widest margin of
defeat in 92 games for the Sailors, but Brinkley does not want the
players to measure the entire season by the last game.
“I want the seniors to walk away with a positive feeling of what
they have accomplished,” he said. “I don’t want them to have a sour
taste in their mouths. They did some amazing things this year. I want
them to realize they had a great season.”
Brinkley said the seniors are the main reason the team excelled
the way it did.
“I tell the kids at the start of the season that we won’t have a
good year without good senior leadership,” he said.
Three pivotal games stick out in the season.
The Tars scored two touchdowns, a 63-yard punt return by senior
Spencer Link and a 46-yard pass from senior quarterback Kasey Peters
to Link, in the final 3:27 as Newport erased a 17-0 third-quarter
deficit against Back Bay rival Corona del Mar for a 21-17 win in Week 3.
The Newport defense limited Aliso Niguel star quarterback Drew
Westling to 178 passing yards, well under his 245 season average, as
the Sailors handed the previously undefeated Wolverines a 21-7 loss.
A fumble recovery with 12 seconds left set up Peters’ 30-yard
touchdown pass to Alex Orth as Newport stunned Mayfair in the
semifinals.
“We had some big games,” Brinkley said. “Obviously, against Corona
del Mar we had to come from behind to win it in a big rivalry game.
Against Aliso, everything lined up for it to be the league
championship game. And the Mayfair game was very exciting.”
But Brinkley said other games were just as memorable.
“The first game of the season against Fountain Valley was a very
good game,” he said. “We had a lot of players on the sidelines
because of injuries. Charter Oak [in the quarterfinals] was a very
good football team. That was a very tough game.”
Brinkley said he was proud Newport won the Sea View League title,
the fourth league championship in Brinkley’s 19 years with the
Sailors.
He was also proud of how his team responded during the playoffs.
“We used up a lot of emotion in [the Charter Oak and Mayfair]
games,” Brinkley said. “[Orange Lutheran] was handling their
opponents pretty easily in the playoffs [averaging scores of 35-8 in
the first three rounds]. We had gone through a tough run of emotional
games. It’s hard to maintain the emotional high.”
Brinkley compared this year’s playoff run with the 1996 playoffs
when the Sailors pulled out a 23-16 victory over Servite in the
semifinals and then lost to Santa Margarita, 38-0, in the Division V
championship game.
“We had to beat a very big Servite team,” Brinkley said. “And then
we line up the next week and face [future Heisman Trophy winner]
Carson Palmer.”
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