Prep column: The clock is ticking
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Barry Faulkner
There are no holdouts in high school football. For this, coaches,
fans, sportswriters and even some players are thankful. But even the most
enthusiastic participant is likely to spend the next two days, this final
weekend of freedom, with a festering knot in the pit of his stomach.
It is now hours -- less than 48 for those smart enough to have seized
the suddenly fleeting opportunity to ignore today’s alarm clock -- before
fall football practice will commence.
Come Monday, the blessings of exhaustion, muscle aches and mental
fatigue will replace the sweet summer pleasures of sleeping in, hanging
out and generally taking life at one’s own pace.
Soon, that pace will be controlled by a shrieking whistle or blaring
blow horn, which, per precisely prepared practice plans, carves the
misery into frenetic fractions, the sum of which is predictable pain.
That the passageway to Friday night lights is illuminated by days of
scorching late-summer sunshine, merely amplifies the rewards the game
often gives those who display the will to endure.
But for coaches, the final days of the designated three-week “dead
period,” bring anticipation lacking such ambiguity.
“Once I get back from vacation, I’m ready to go,” Corona del Mar Coach
Dick Freeman said. “Just the fact that games are on TV this time of year
gets me excited. It’s not like I’m going to sit through an entire NFL
preseason game, but just to be able to watch a little football on TV
helps get me ready. And, I actually have something to read about on the
sports page.”
Newport Harbor Coach Jeff Brinkley, who believes he is as excited
about this year as any other in his 23-year head-coaching career, said
attempts to cleanse football from his mind the last three weeks have
largely been unsuccessful.
“You try to relax as much as you can, but I don’t know how relaxing it
is,” Brinkley said. “You’re still anticipating what’s coming up and
there’s always something to do. I like to read a lot of journals and talk
to people about football. Looking for ways to improve is a never-ending
process and, like I tell our players, you need to be on the prowl for
knowledge.”
First-year Estancia High Coach Jay Noonan, who got the job after
spring practice was completed, said the summer has been an endless and
energetic procession toward Monday’s debut.
“I’m just as enthusiastic now as the day I first got the job,” Noonan
said. “I didn’t get out to the beach as much as I like to and I haven’t
taken much time to hang out with my family in Lake Tahoe. But I can’t
wait to hit the field.”
The Corona del Mar coaches did indeed get away for some of their final
few days before practice, but it was not away from football. The staff
repaired to a home near Lake Arrowhead for some concentrated strategic
planning for the upcoming season.
“A lot of times you have distractions at the (campus) office,” Freeman
said. “And, if I ask our guys to meet for three days, six hours a day,
before practice starts, they would look at me a little funny. This way,
we get away from all the distractions and have two eight-hour days
(Friday and today) to get it all done.”
More preseason news involves Newport Harbor High senior offensive
tackle Robert Chai, who was recognized in SuperPrep magazine as the No.
60 college prospect among players from California, Arizona, Nevada,
Oregon, Washington and Hawaii in its Aug. 5 edition.
The 6-foot-4, 270-pound Chai, who earned All-CIF Southern Section,
All-Newport-Mesa District and All-Sea View League recognition for helping
the Sailors reach the CIF Division VI title game last fall, is being
heavily recruited and has already fielded scholarship offers.
Cal and Washington State have made scholarship offers, according to
Brinkley, while Chai said Nebraska, LSU, and Wisconsin are all in the
picture.
Chai said he is leaning toward Cal and he could commit before the end
of the upcoming season.
SuperPrep, for which Newport Harbor alumnus Allen Wallace is the
publisher, also mentioned Harbor senior receiver-cornerback Brian Gaeta
is garnering recruiting interest from a handful of Pac-10 schools.
Included in the SuperPrep prospects from its Far West region (the
aforementioned six states), is Marina High fullback-linebacker Adam
Hayward at No. 48. Listed at 6-0, 200 pounds, Hayward will lead the
Vikings into a Week 2 nonleague game against Newport Harbor, Sept. 13 at
Westminster High.
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