OCC blanks Vaqs
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The Orange Coast College football team had plenty to talk about on
the three-hour-plus bus ride home after defeating host Santa Barbara
City College in the nonconference season opener Saturday.
But the Pirates, most assuredly, also talked about nothing.
The latter refers to the OCC defense’s shutout in the 11-0
victory, the first zero posted by the Pirates in 19 games and only
the program’s second shutout in 114 contests.
As rare as blanking an opponent is, however, it was not totally
unexpected.
“We have some guys back on defense who weren’t happy with the way
things went last year [a 2-8 campaign],” OCC sophomore returning
middle linebacker Dave Ronning said. “We wanted to take it upon
ourselves this year to win games with our defense.”
The Pirates did exactly that, though the offense was not without
positives in the program’s second straight victory, dating back to
last year’s season finale.
OCC freshman cornerback Cory Nicol returned an interception 32
yards for a touchdown with 1:37 left in the first quarter for the
game’s only TD. The Nicol pick, on a ball that went through a Vaquero
receiver’s hands, came on the third play of Santa Barbara’s first
possession.
So, in essence, it took the OCC defense three plays to do what the
Pirates’ offense could not with its 20-play game-opening drive that
fizzled on an unsuccessful 29-yard field-goal attempt.
OCC widened the lead on its first possession of the second half,
as freshman Kyle Vandenbos coaxed a 30-yard field goal through the
uprights with 3:51 remaining in the period.
Pirates Coach Mike Taylor said afterward the three-pointer caromed
off either a Santa Barbara player’s hands or a helmet to find its way
onto the scoreboard.
Fittingly, the OCC defense put the game away late in the fourth
quarter.
The first of the aforementioned crucial plays came when freshman
Keola Asuega, a Costa Mesa High product, intercepted and returned it
25 yards to halt a promising Santa Barbara scoring threat that had
advanced to the OCC 23-yard line.
After OCC ate some clock, before punting the ball away and pinning
the hosts at their own 2-yard line, sophomore end Justin Williams
provided the exclamation point to a dominant defensive effort.
Williams, who was academically ineligible last season after
earning first-team all-division honors in 2003, pounced on
quarterback Justin Lucas in the pocket on first down. Lucas managed
to get a pass off, but was called for intentional grounding in the
end zone, which resulted in an automatic safety with 1:41 left.
Williams, as well as all-division returners Ronning, outside
linebacker Aaron Miller and strong safety Mordy Ornguze, out of
Corona del Mar High, were among several Pirates who made plays
defensively.
Sophomore end Paul Bartsch, sophomore tackles Alex Mulu and Joe
Okoturoh, sophomore outside ‘backer Ryan Miller, sophomore free
safety Nick Snowden and freshman corner Paul Barnes also were
consistently in position.
Ornguze partially blocked a punt and Barnes fell on the ball to
set OCC up at the Vaqueros’ 28 midway through the second quarter.
Williams produced the first of his two sacks late in the opening
half, while the entire front seven combined to stuff Santa Barbara
for a 2-yard loss on a fourth-and-two, ending a 13-play drive that
followed the second-half kickoff.
Santa Barbara produced just 51 rushing yards and 91 passing yards.
Its longest run was an 18-yard scramble by starting quarterback Pat
Williams and the hosts had only one other run of more than 9 yards.
The Vaqueros, coming off a 1-9 campaign, had only three pass
completions of more than 8 yards, with a long of 20.
OCC stopped Santa Barbara for negative yards on eight running
plays and eight other Vaquero plays resulted in either zero or 1
yard, including one pass completion.
“[Defensive Coordinator Scott Orloff] did a great job,” Taylor
said. “Our offense isn’t as far along as our defense, which has all
those returning starters. To have guys like Ronning, Aaron Williams
and Ornguze really gives us some anchors and it’s nice to have Justin
Williams back in the mix. And we think Nicol [out of Woodenville,
Wash.] is the best corner we’ve had here in a number of years.”
The OCC defense, which produced the winning touchdown in the
team’s first victory last fall (a Marcus Dailey interception return
in the third quarter to break a 10-10 deadlock in a 17-10 triumph
over Long Beach City), didn’t corner the market on strong play.
The OCC offense, which failed to commit a turnover - something it
could not accomplish in any game last season -- kept the defense off
the field. The Pirates had 34:29 in time of possession, nearly 10
minutes more than the hosts.
“The offense moved the ball,” Taylor said.
Sophomore tailback Robert Aoki pounded for 58 rushing yards on 20
carries, while Patrick Harrigan and Joe Harris combined for another
56.
Sophomore quarterback Chad Schmigel completed four of his first
five passes and finished 6 of 12 for 44 yards.
Chad Brown missed a 38-yard field-goal try wide left near the end
of the first half.
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