Prep football: Strength from within
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Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - The term “football factory” is most often
associated with programs that consistently provide talent for a higher
level of competition, typically colleges who season future pros.
But at Newport Harbor High, a veteran coaching staff, led by Jeff
Brinkley, has become proficient at manufacturing continually productive
work forces whose playing careers are often completed months before
graduation.
While most prep programs trudge along hoping to catch an intermittent
talent cycle, the Sailors appear to navigate seamlessly along a route
that seldom strays from substantial success.
For instance, Harbor’s 88 wins the last nine seasons are surpassed by
only one Orange County public school (Los Alamitos has 99).
During that run, which began in 1992 with the school’s first CIF
Southern Section title game appearance since 1942, Brinkley’s boys have
played in five section championship games, capping unbeaten title seasons
with victories in 1994 and ’99.
They have played nearly 2 1/2 seasons in the playoffs alone, during
the aforementioned roll, winning 19 of their last 24 postseason contests.
And the curve upon which all future Harbor teams will be judged, keeps
getting steeper.
Last year’s team, which went 11-3, combined with the 13-0-1 record
posted by the 1999 squad to set a school record for victories in
back-to-back seasons.
The three-season win record of 32, set by the 1994-96 Tars, is within
reach this season, for which the primary goal remains: play 14 weeks.
Furthermore, the only school to defeat Newport in Sea View League play
the last two years, Irvine, continues to see its talent pool diluted by
neighboring Northwood, which enters its second varsity season this fall
with its first senior class.
The Sea View League, which has produced the last nine champions in its
CIF division and placed 18 of its teams in the last 13 division title
games, has provided virtually the only competition for the Sailors the
last five years. In its last 34 games against teams not in the Sea View,
dating back to the opener in 1996, Newport is 32-1-1. Only Marina, which
tied the Tars in ’99 and defeated them last year, has broken through.
And though some may point to the loss of decorated All-CIF standouts
Chris Manderino and Alan Saenz, as well as all but one starter from last
year’s defensive unit, as reasons for caution, the assembly line has
restocked the cupboard before and likely will again.
Last year’s junior varsity squad went 10-0, after losing only once the
year before. Last year’s freshman team was 6-3-1.
The Sailors’ sophisticated year-round weight training, which builds
football muscles, not necessarily those that play well on the beach,
clearly deserves a portion of the credit for these results.
Perhaps a more primary thread through all these postgame celebrations,
however, is continuity of coaching.
“A lot of it has to do with the format we use,” said Brinkley,
entering his 16th season at Harbor with 128 victories, tops all time
among Newport-Mesa District grid coaches. “We have the sophomores
practice with us and we run the same program at all four levels. We also
have some good continuity with the coaching staff, so by the time the
kids get to be seniors, they’ve already been coached by their position
coaches for two years. They know the terminology, the techniques and all
the drills we use. Heck, a lot of them could probably go out and coach
themselves.”
Brinkley’s seven assistants, including running backs coach Bill Brown
who enters his 20th season this fall, have coached a combined 60 years at
Harbor. Additionally, four staff members played in the program.
And while this consistent coaching knowledge and principles continue
to orbit Sailor players like a videotape loop, the staff’s personalities
and ability to build relationships with players, helps foster an
atmosphere effectively divided between intensity, perspective and humor.
That being said, it’s difficult to dismiss Brinkley’s optimism about
this group. The presence of six returning full-time starters on offense,
and another who started four games, doesn’t hurt either.
Senior quarterback Morgan Craig earned all-district recognition as a
junior, when he completed 111 of 184 passes (60%) for 1,308 yards and
nine touchdowns, while yielding only five interceptions.
Senior two-way starter Brian Gaeta, expected to be recovered from
offseason surgery to relieve tendinitis in both knees, comes off a season
in which he caught 62 passes for 792 yards. He also had six interceptions
at cornerback and scored 10 touchdowns. He was first-team all-league and
all-district on offense.
Joe Foley, a 6-foot, 230-pound senior who matched Saenz’s year-old
clean and jerk record of 319 pounds, shifts from tight end to fullback on
offense and will play tackle on defense, where he saw considerable action
last year.
The returning senior offensive line triumvirate of Robert Chai, Jeff
Marshall and Bryan Breland form a nucleus for what Brinkley said may
become the best offensive line in his tenure at Harbor.
Chai, a 6-3, 270-pound left tackle, was an All-CIF, all-league and
all-district performer who gained offseason recognition as a blue-chip
recruit. Cal and Washington State have already offered him scholarships
and no less than Nebraska, LSU and Wisconsin, remain atop his growing
list of suitors.
Marshall, a 6-5, 215-pound center, committed early to Montana, where
he will join Saenz next year.
Breland, a 6-3, 245-pound guard, was all-district and second-team
all-league as a junior.
Add to this group junior tailback Dartangan (formerly Dede) Johnson,
whom Brinkley estimates amassed 2,000 rushing yards in 10 junior varsity
games as a sophomore, and it’s easy to see why the Sailors could be
playing well past Thanksgiving.
The defensive questions remain and Brinkley is particularly concerned
about a lack of depth in the front seven. But Breland and Chai could help
out in the defensive trenches, if needed.
Predictably, the offense looked sharp in Friday’s scrimmage against
Mission Viejo, while the defense had some difficulty stopping the
Diablos’ running game.
Orange Lutheran and Dana Hills, Harbor’s opponents in Week 1 and Week
4, respectively, have already won impressively over Hawaii schools.
Further, Brinkley believes Sea View rivals Aliso Niguel, Laguna Hills
and Woodbridge will all be improved over a year ago and that those
doomsayers may be premature when predicting defending league and Division
VI champion Irvine’s decline.
Brinkley said the opener, Sept. 6 against Orange Lutheran at Brea
Olinda High, may be the best test the Tars will face in the regular
season.
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