Bryce Alderton As the sun set over...
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Bryce Alderton
As the sun set over the hills looking out West toward the Pacific
Ocean, players on the Sage Hill High football team huddled, ‘hooted
and hollered’ in joy over what they had just accomplished, a win in
the school’s first varsity football game.
With a six-touchdown performance, including scoring the first 20
points of the game, the Lightning outpaced visiting Midway Baptist,
42-24, in a nonleague game Friday at Sage Hill.
After the game, smiles abounded as family members and friends
greeted the players as they walked off the field.
Senior fullback Cliff Swanson, a 6-foot-2, 230-pound “horse with
the ball,” as Coach Tom Monarch calls him, met up with his father,
who congratulated him on his, and the team’s, performance.
Swanson rushed 19 times for 147 yards and scored two touchdowns in
his varsity debut.
“It’s unbelievable,” Swanson said while lifting his legs up and
down to stretch parts of his battered body. “I couldn’t have hoped
for the game to go any other way with the school spirit and
everything.”
About 200 fans cheered on the Lightning Friday. The Newport Beach
Police Department’s Color Guard held the American and California
flags accompanied by the Sage Hill choir, which sang the national
anthem.
“We’ve come so far,” Swanson said. “The thing that makes this
extra sweet is that these guys beat us by one two years ago.”
Monarch coached Sage Hill last year’s junior varsity team and
expressed pride that this year’s seniors experienced their first
varsity win in their first varsity game.
“Hey I’m an undefeated coach,” Monarch said. “It’s really great
for the five seniors who were out here when we had an eight-man
team.”
Sage Hill finished 6-2 last year in junior varsity competition and
picked up right where it left off early in Friday’s contest.
After the Patriots went four-and-out on their first series, the
Lightning got the ball with 9:51 left in the first and mustered a
six-play scoring drive that ate up 2:39.
Swanson ran for gains of 12 yards twice and 9 yards in the drive
to set up senior 6-2, 185-pound quarterback Zach Friedrichs for his
9-yard touchdown. Friedrichs finished the contest 7 of 10 for 153
yards, three touchdowns and no interceptions.
Friedrichs was just warming up, as Sage Hill got the ball with
2:54 left in the quarter at its own 43 when Friedrichs found 6-4,
205-pound Scott Cho streaking down the right sideline for a 43-yard
touchdown pass play to put the Lightning ahead, 14-0. And they
regained the momentum early in the second quarter as Friedrichs hit
5-11 freshman Keya Manshadi with a 37-yard strike down the left
sideline to put the Lightning up, 20-0. Midway Baptist blocked the
conversion kick.
Midway Baptist rebounded in the second quarter, outscoring Sage
Hill, 16-14, but the Sage Hill defense came up with a key turnover
with 5:22 left in the half and Midway Baptist facing second-and-eight
on its own 40. Cho made a crushing hit on Patriot quarterback John
Carr that jarred the ball loose and Sage Hill recovered at the 38.
The Lightning struck on the very next play as Swanson took
advantage of a hole opened by his offensive line and rumbled 38 yards
into the end zone.
The Patriots couldn’t contain the deep threat from Friedrichs as
he connected with 6-foot, 185-pound wide receiver Erik Williams on
another 43-yard touchdown strike with 9:21 left in the third quarter
to put Sage Hill up, 34-16. Then, after a 3-minute, 27-second drive
by the Patriots resulted in a Turner touchdown, Sage Hill executed a
10-play drive that lasted 3:44, its longest of the game.
Friedrichs displayed his agility and speed on fourth-and-nine at
the Midway Baptist 42, eluding tacklers in the pocket and scrambling
to his right for an 11-yard gain. The Lightning collected four of its
16 first downs on the drive, capped by Swanson’s 2-yard run with 1:59
left to round out the scoring. Friedrichs finished with 56 yards on
the ground to contribute to Sage Hill’s 226-yard rushing total.
Cho and Swanson swarmed around Patriot ball carriers all game, as
did 6-0, 200-pound linebacker Ray Lim and 6-foot, 170-pound defensive
lineman Drew Roeser, who caught Graham in the backfield for an 8-yard
loss during Midway Baptist’s second drive of the fourth quarter.
“(Cho) is maybe the best defensive player on the field, he’s so
quick,” Monarch said. “The defense was average, a lot of bend but no
break The linebackers have to move up and fill the holes a lot more
because they were overpowering us off tackle. The key was the offense
clicking because we had to score almost every time to win so jumping
out to a lead helped the newcomers.”
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