Prep football: Authority figures
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Barry Faulkner
CORONA DEL MAR - With a nucleus of experienced returners, Corona
del Mar High football coach Dick Freeman said leadership is abundant as
the Sea Kings’ continue the second of their three weeks of spring
practice. But, Freeman said, it’s the style of leadership being
administered that pleases him most.
“This is the best group of seniors we’ve had since 1995 (when the Sea
Kings went to the CIF Southern Section Division V semifinals),” Freeman
said. “We have 19 or 20 seniors who are all taking this leadership thing
to heart. We’ve talked a lot to the seniors, who have been through a few
hills and valleys along the way. We told them that rather than pushing
their teammates through things, we’d like them just to set a good example
and get the rest of the guys to come along with them. What we didn’t want
was the seniors turning into a bunch of foremen. I didn’t need bosses, I
needed leaders.”
Thankfully, Freeman believes, an understated leadership pattern has
emerged as the Sea Kings begin preparation for the 2002 campaign.
With so much experience, that preparation is already ahead of years
past, with Freeman and his staff able to do more in the way of
fine-tuning than introductory instruction.
“We haven’t had to go back and start from zero,” Freeman said. “We’re
tweaking things this spring, more than dwelling on fundamentals. For
instance, rather than teaching our linebackers when to drop in coverage,
we’re teaching them how to drop more effectively. We’ve been able to just
take that next step.”
And while veteran assistant Ed Blanton is stepping in for departed
offensive coordinator Lyle Lansdell (now assisting the varsity at Aliso
Niguel, where his son plays), Freeman said the emphasis this spring has
been on defense.
“We’re working on doing a little more defensively, while still putting
in a couple new wrinkles on offense,” Freeman said.
Freeman reports about 60 players are attending workouts, which run
every weekday except Wednesdays. He was also pleased that almost half of
those are linemen, which has been an area of need in recent years.
“We have 28 linemen, which is more than we had healthy on the whole
team last season,” said Freeman, whose 2001 squad finished 5-4-1 and
missed the playoffs.
One standout watching from the sidelines this spring is two-time
All-Pacific Coast League offensive lineman John Daley. Daley, a
second-team all-league honoree as a sophomore and a junior, broke his leg
recently in a freak accident at a concert and is not expected to be back
on the field until late in the summer session.
In addition to his seniors, Freeman is also impressed with a strong
group of next year’s sophomores. The unit that contended for a PCL crown
as freshmen, will provide depth, as well as allow the Sea Kings to field
a sophomore team, said Freeman, who also expects the sophomores to
practice separately from the varsity next fall.
The Sea Kings will not play a spring game.
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