T-wolves win defensive battle
Seldom have two plays formed more poignant parentheses around the
story of one football game as the ones that opened and, virtually
closed Northwood High’s 21-0 Pacific Coast League victory over
visiting Corona del Mar Thursday night.
On the first play from scrimmage, Northwood linebacker Mark
Bentrott hammered a CdM ball carrier, forcing a fumble. The
Timberwolves’ Michael Ciaccio scooped up the loose ball and sprinted
19 yards for a touchdown.
Alex Metskas kicked the first of his three conversions and the
hosts led, 7-0, with only eight seconds elapsed at Irvine High.
With CdM trying to muster some offense in the final minute,
Northwood cornerback Taylor Lucero intercepted a pass in the flat and
raced 32 yards for a touchdown with just 34 seconds remaining to
finalize the scoring.
In between it was mostly defensive dominance from both teams.
And CdM, which had built a plus-nine turnover ratio in its first
five games, had five of the game’s seven turnovers, to further hinder
its offensive efforts.
“That was a heck of a defensive football game,” CdM Coach Dick
Freeman, also the Sea Kings’ defensive coordinator, said. “We just
had to play defense a lot longer than they did. At some point, you’ve
got to play some offense.
On only two of its 15 possessions did the Sea Kings (3-3, 1-1 in
league), ranked No. 5 in CIF Southern Section Division IX, have the
ball in Northwood territory.
The first such occasion, CdM linebacker Mike Gratzinger recovered
a fumbled snap to set the visitors up at the Timberwolves’ 40-yard
line with 45 seconds left in the first half.
An 8-yard pass completion and a 15-yard personal foul penalty on
the Timberwolves moved the ball to the 17, before three plays
produced nothing and prompted a 35-yard field-goal try. But the kick,
which carried well beyond the crossbar, was wide left with nine
seconds left, allowing the hosts to retain a 7-0 halftime lead.
Northwood (6-0, 2-0), ranked No. 1 in CIF Division IX, opened the
second half with the most effective offensive possession of the game,
for either team.
Coach Rick Curtis’ squad needed just six plays to march 72 yards
to double its lead, with quarterback Stuart Sharpe rolling right and
finding Adam Garza alone in the end zone for a 27-yard scoring pass
with 8:51 left in the third quarter.
Familiar offensive futility followed for both teams, until Lucero
added the exclamation point on Northwood’s second shutout of the
season.
The Timberwolves have now won 21 of their last 22 league games.
But the CdM defense, which scored three second-half touchdowns in a
40-0 win over Calvary Chapel Sept. 30, kept the outcome in doubt by
consistently bottling up the hosts.
“It was a defensive battle,” Curtis said. “[The Sea Kings] played
real well defensively. Their kids played really hard. We knew it was
going to be like that coming in. Their linebackers really run and
hit. They didn’t let us have a big play.”
When it came to being stingy with yardage, however, the
Timberwolves’ defense clearly earned the upper hand.
CdM, which has been blanked in two of its last three games had
only two plays gain double-digit yards. A 16-yard run by senior
tailback Matt Loyd on the first play after the ill-fated opening
fumble, was the biggest damage done to the hosts.
Shaun Mohler, who once again shared quarterback duties with Colin
Wigley, scrambled for 10 yards on a bootleg to highlight the Sea
Kings’ only other journey beyond midfield.
The Sea Kings took over after a 21-yard punt on their own 49 with
8:35 left in the game. On third-and-five, Mohler bolted around the
left side for a first down, one of five by the visitors all night.
After Mohler connected with Steve Hillgren for 7 yards on
fourth-and-six, CdM had a first down at the Timberwolves’ 25.
But, fittingly, the possession ended when the officials shorted
the Sea Kings a down. After only two incomplete passes, the down
marker, and officials, indicated fourth down. Another incomplete pass
gave the ball back to the hosts.
Aside from the opening drive of the second half, Northwood failed
to do much with the ball, as well.
The Timberwolves had nine of the game’s 15 punts and a Hillgren
interception in the end zone halted another scoring opportunity in
the first quarter.
The Sea Kings produced five sacks. Senior noseguard John Fairbanks
had a pair, while Matt Burgner and Erik Rask each had a solo sack and
shared another.
Burgner, a returning All-CIF end, has now been in on 33 sacks in
his varsity career, a school career record. He came in with 31, tied
with Roger Rolle atop the career sack list.
In addition to the sacks, CdM made another five tackles behind the
line and another for no gain.
Keaten Price, Mohler, Austin Ray, Max Prescott, Ford Noe and
Gratzinger all made resounding stops for the Sea Kings.
Burgner forced two fumbles, but both times, Northwood retained
possession.
Northwood managed only two plays of more than 16 yards. Besides
the 27-yard touchdown pass, the biggest gain was a 21-yard run by
senior Nick Greenlee, who came off the bench to produce a game-high
57 rushing yards on eight attempts.
Loyd, who came in with 573 rushing yards this season, finished
with 34 yards on 10 carries.
Wigley completed 7 of 11, but produced just 36 passing yards.
Without much time in the pocket, both Sea King quarterbacks were
relegated to short passes, mostly on three-step drops.
Mohler threw for 42 yards on five completions.
No CdM pass play gained more than 9 yards.
The five CdM turnovers were virtually the antithises of the game
plan Freeman has preached all season.
His aim has been to simplify things on offense, in an attempt to
decrease turnovers, and let his defense dictate positive
opportunities.
The defense did its share Thursday, but, like Freeman said, there
was little rest for the weary.
Northwood amassed nearly 29 minutes in time of possession, almost
10 minutes more than that attained by the visitors.
The loss is CdM’s fifth straight to Northwood, which most believe
will battle defending CIF Division IX champion Tesoro for the league
title.
The Sea Kings will try to rebound Oct. 14 at Tesoro.
Northwood and Tesoro are scheduled to square off in the final week
of the regular season, Nov. 11 at Tesoro.
Even with a loss to Tesoro, CdM can secure the league’s third
guaranteed CIF playoff berth with victories over Laguna Beach (Oct.
20), Beckman (Nov. 4) and University (Nov. 11).
Northwood 21, Corona del Mar 0
SCORE BY QUARTERS
*--*
Corona del Mar 0 0 0 0 - 0
Northwood 7 0 7 7 - 21
*--*
FIRST QUARTER
Nor -- Ciaccio 19 fumble return (Metskas kick), 11:52.
THIRD QUARTER
Nor -- Garza 27 pass from Sharpe (Metskas kick), 8:51.
FOURTH QUARTER
Nor -- Lucero 32 interception return (Metskas kick), 0:34.
A -- 700 (est.)
INDIVIDUAL RUSHING
CdM -- Loyd, 10-34; Ray, 4-5; Mohler, 3-3; Folks, 1-5; Yi, 4-2;
Burgner, 1-2; Wigley, 1-minus-5.
Nor -- Greenlee, 8-57; Lucero, 11-48; Laymon, 3-5; Eusey, 1-2;
Sharpe, 12-minus-6; Toon, 2-minus-5; team, 1-minus-1.
INDIVIDUAL PASSING
CdM -- Wigley, 7-11-1, 36; Mohler, 5-17-1, 42.
Nor -- Sharpe, 10-14-1, 91, 1 TD; Toon, 1-2-0, 11.
INDIVIDUAL RECEIVING
CdM -- Hillgren, 4-24; Meshkin, 2-16; Dupuie, 2-9; Mohler, 1-9;
Fenton, 1-9; Loyd, 1-8; Yi, 1-3.
Nor -- Curtis, 7-51; Garza, 1-27, 1 TD; Peterson, 2-13; Pollard,
1-11.
GAME STATISTICS
*--*
CdM Nor
First downs 5 11
Rushes-yardage 24-46 38-88
Passing yardage 78 102
Passing 12-29-2 11-16-1 Net return yards* 0 51
Sacks-yardage 3-12 5-47
Net yardage 124 241
Punts 6-30 9-31.7
Fumbles-fumbles lost 3-3 4-1
Flags-net yardage 4-20 9-74
Time of possession 19:18 28:42
*Punt returns, interceptions, fumble returns
*--*
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