Prep football: CdM hardship ends
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Barry Faulkner
CORONA DEL MAR - The end to what Corona del Mar High football Coach
Dick Freeman termed the most calamitous season of his long career,
brought disappointment Sunday.
Troy, to which the Sea Kings blew a 21-point fourth-quarter lead in a
34-34 nonleague tie Sept. 15, collected the lone at-large bid into the
CIF Southern Section Division IX playoffs. With it, the Warriors (6-3-1)
earned a first-round road date Friday with top-seeded South Hills (9-1),
the defending Division IX champion, which eliminated CdM in last year’s
first round, 34-3.
And while Freeman would have loved the opportunity to continue
competing, he did not challenge the section playoff committee’s decision
to go with Troy.
“I can see their logic,” said Freeman, who believes the Freeway
League’s superior postseason record (5-6 the last two years as opposed to
the PCL’s 1-6) had more to do with the decision than the Sea Kings’
finishing the regular season with two straight losses and Troy winning
its last two contests.
“The one thing I really look back on is that Troy game,” Freeman said.
“We had that game.”
Freeman also looked back Sunday on the Sea Kings’ 5-4-1 campaign,
which featured numerous injuries, player defections, the tragedies of
Sept. 11, and the death of junior tailback Mark Cianciulli’s 50-year-old
father, Hugo, the morning of a league victory.
“I’ve never seen anything like it,” Freeman said.
Freeman cited a 19-14 come-from-behind win over Golden West League
champion Westminster (Oct. 5) as one highlight, as well as the maturation
of several young players the program will count upon next season.
Freeman said the extreme youth that comprised this team -- only two
seniors, sometimes one, started on defense, while three juniors started
on offense -- as well as a talented freshman team that lost to Northwood
Thursday in a PCL title showdown, create a positive outlook for the
future.
“I talked to our freshman team (Saturday) and we planned on bringing
about 10 of them up for the playoffs if we had made it,” Freeman said.
“We were very young this year and we played some guys, due to injuries,
who never thought they’d see playing time. We’re bringing veterans back,
guys who know what they have to do in the offseason.”
Freeman expects continued leadership from Cianciulli, as well as
junior tailback-outside linebacker Keith Long, and junior twin brothers
Matt and Kris Cooper. Junior defensive tackle Jayson Skalla is another
standout who will be back.
“I really liked those guys’ attitude,” Freeman said. “We know those
guys will work hard in the offseason.
“It’s hard to believe that a guy like Matt Cooper, a 215-pound
fullback and linebacker, is going to step it up a notch, but I think he
will.
“And Kris (an outside linebacker-tight end who missed much of the
league season with a torn knee ligament) is a guy who worked and battled
to be able to come back at the end of the season. I know he’ll work hard
for next year.”
Freeman said the lesson to be learned from all the hardship this
season is clear.
“It really showed us that you’ve just got to keep at it and you can’t
let (adversity) get to you,” Freeman said.
Cianciulli, despite personal tragedy, kept at it. By rushing for more
than 100 yards in each of the final five games, including two of more
than 200, he finished with 1,290 yards and 11 touchdowns on 195 carries.
His single-season total is sixth best in the program’s 40 varsity seasons
and he became the third straight CdM back to rush for at least 1,000
yards.
The Sea Kings also benefited from the contributions of senior
quarterback Dylan Hendy (1,057 passing yards with eight touchdown passes
and only five interceptions), senior Steven Ward (a team-high 31
receptions for 400 yards and five TDs, as well as a team-best four
interceptions) and senior line standouts Steven Russell and Steve
Shipman, among others.
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