Community college football: Bucs come up big-time
- Share via
Steve Virgen
TORRANCE - After the final seconds ticked away, Orange Coast
College defensive tackle J.T. Nuimata made his way to the Gatorade jug.
Big wins call for huge celebrations. Still, linebackers coach Mike Mayne
caught Niumata and told him to hold off, because as the coach said, “It’s
only Week 3.”
Nevertheless, the Pirates (2-1) scored a victory of mammoth
proportions with a 14-10 come-from-behind win at El Camino Saturday. The
Bucs, who scored their points in the final quarter, have not defeated the
Warriors since 1973, about 10 years before some of OCC’s players were
born.
El Camino (1-2) had beaten the Bucs 13 straight, including a 30-0 win
last year.
“It’s been a long time,” OCC Coach Mike Taylor said. “I was playing
football back then (for Santa Ana). This gives us the confidence because
we’re a young team. (The Warriors) were under 300 yards of offense,
stunning.”
Stunning indeed. Coast was seemingly on the brink of being sent toward
a downward spiral after an upsetting 35-29 loss to Los Angeles Harbor.
But the Bucs answered the challenge and have rejuvenated their heartbeat
with familiar names from last year and new faces of today.
Sophomore wide receiver Vince Strang caught a 4-yard touchdown pass
from Nick Higgs with 9:22 remaining, proving to be the difference. Strang
led all receivers with eight receptions for 122 yards. Higgs threw for
218 yards and two touchdown, his first scoring toss a 14-yard connection
with Jon Jackson, who contributed 67 yards on three catches.
“This is a big confidence booster ... big-time,” Strang said. “The
morale was down after the loss last week. But, now we’re really coming
together as a group. Everyone is starting to pull for each other and it
makes it fun to be a part of the OCC Bucs.”
Freshman middle linebacker Travis Loidolt, who stepped up in place of
injured starter Marvin Simmons, capped a solid performance when he
recovered a fumble with 1:11 remaining to secure the win. Sophomore
defensive tackle James Furtsch caused the fumble as he stripped the ball
away from quarterback Ryan Gilbert.
“I was prepared for this occasion,” Loidolt said of taking over at
middle linebacker. “(The defense) played really well. We only let one big
run play and one big pass play by us. The (defensive backs) did a great
job of keeping their wide receivers at bay.”
The Bucs’ running game also helped the cause as freshman Niles
Mittasch completed a steady performance with 69 yards on 18 carries,
while starter Leonard DeRoche missed the game due to personal reasons.
The Warriors could not build on their 7-0 lead after the first
quarter. El Camino, instead, fell apart, suffering from 16 penalties for 160 yards. Three penalties helped the Bucs score their first touchdown.
OCC’s 14-play, 93-yard scoring drive, which took 7:09 off the clock,
ended when Higgs found Jackson on a fade route. On the way to the score,
Coast received three first downs after a pass interference, personal foul
and spearing penalty.
The Warriors tried to respond to the Bucs’ touchdown, but to no avail.
On El Camino’s third play, Gilbert fumbled a snap and linebacker Daniel
Steinau recovered, setting up the Bucs’ go-ahead touchdown.
Before Strang caught the TD pass on a slant route on third-and-goal
from the 5, Jackson drew a pass interference call in the end zone.
“I hope you enjoy all the gifts that we gave you,” El Camino Coach
John Featherstone told OCC offensive coordinator Sean Ponder, while
leaving the stadium. “Christmas came early for you.”
“It happens,” Ponder responded. “We didn’t get some of those calls in
our game last week.”
Taylor said Saturday’s victory was huge because the Pirates need the
confidence as they host Mt. San Antonio Saturday at 7 p.m. and Pasadena
City the following week.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.