Invert and conquer
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If the high school football teams from Newport Harbor and Corona
del Mar are to conquer the competition in the Sea View and Pacific
Coast leagues, respectively, both will do so bucking their league’s
statistical trend.
Newport Harbor, which will need to knock off league favorite
Foothill to defend its Sea View crown, is one of only two Sea View
representatives with more passing yards than rushing yards thus far.
The Sailors have accumulated 52.3% of their 1,584 yards via the
pass, while the other five teams in the league have produced 56.2% of
their yards on the ground.
Only Foothill, which has thrown for 68.2% of its 1,742 yards, has thrown for more yards than it has run for among Harbor’s Sea View
rivals.
In the PCL, which could be called the Pass Completion League this
fall, CdM’s five league opponents have thrown for nearly 62% of their
offensive yards, while the Sea Kings have gained nearly 70% of their
1,059 yards on the ground.
Only Laguna Beach, coached by former CdM head man Dave Holland,
joins the Sea Kings as PCL teams that have rushed for more than they
have passed and the Artists’ margin is nearly 50-50.
As both leagues open play this week, here’s a handicap.
In the Sea View League, Foothill, formerly in the Century League,
is the clear favorite, though Newport Harbor will have four more
weeks of improvement, before it visits the Knights in the Nov. 14
regular-season finale at Tustin High.
Foothill (4-1), ranked No. 3 in CIF Southern Section Division VI
and No. 8 in Orange County, has outscored its opponents, 157-82, this
fall and it’s only loss was last week’s 30-20 setback to San Clemente
(3-2 and ranked No. 6 in the county).
Foothill quarterback Don Poole has thrown for 1,139 yards and 10 touchdowns, while running back Mike Liti has produced 461 rushing
yards and has scored eight TDs in four games.
The Knights are 14-3 under second-year coach Doug Case, who
coached previously at Rancho Alamitos.
Laguna Hills (3-2) is averaging a league-high 34.6 points per game
and Coach Bruce Ingalls welcomed back more than a dozen starters from
last year’s CIF Division VI semifinalist. Like Newport Harbor, the
Hawks have a loss to Trabuco Hills on their record. The Mustangs
defeated Newport, 16-8, in Week 1, then topped Laguna Hills, 41-19,
in Week 2.
Irvine, pesky Irvine, which is as hard-nosed as ever, relies
heavily on Terrell Vinson, arguably the league’s most exciting
player. Vinson has rushed for 766 yards and 11 TDs and caught 13
passes for 116 yards. He returns punts and kickoffs and is also one
of the defensive leaders, though limited to spot duty in the
secondary.
The 46 points allowed by the Vaqueros’ 46 defense are the fewest
in the league (Newport has given up 49), and despite huge talent
losses to neighboring Northwood, Coach Terry Henigan has continued to
keep his proud program in playoff contention.
Aliso Niguel (2-3) and Woodbridge (1-4) are both 4-8 against Sea
View competition the last three seasons and have given little
indication they can crack the first division this year.
Last year marked the first time in 10 years the Sea View champion
did not go on to win a Southern Section crown, but the circuit
maintains its League of Champions moniker, since all six schools have
won CIF titles, including Foothill.
In the PCL, a blue and gray monopoly may come to pass as Northwood
(4-1, ranked No. 7 in CIF Division IX), University (2-3 and unranked)
and Corona del Mar (2-3, ranked No. 5 in Division IX), all with the
same uniform colors, appear capable of sweeping the league’s three
guaranteed postseason berths.
But Laguna Beach (4-1 and ranked No. 10 in Division IX), with the
league’s most talented backfield duo in running back Donnelle Darling
(759 rushing yards and 11 TDs) and quarterback Alex Wilson (875
passing yards, including seven TD passes), could finish anywhere from
first to fourth.
Northwood capped an unbeaten regular season by sweeping to the
league crown last year and is 4-1 this fall, despite outscoring teams
a modest 122-73. The Timberwolves join Laguna Beach as the league’s
most balanced offense and I’ll give Coach Rick Curtis’ group the
slight nod over University as the team to beat.
Uni senior quarterback Nick Gerakos (906 yards and six TDs
passing) has the talent and experience to pick secondaries apart and
the Trojans seemingly always manage to maximize their limited size
with toughness. The Trojans three losses include a 24-8 setback to
Irvine and last week’s 30-27 defeat at Northview, which is ranked No.
4 in Division IX.
The Sea Kings have hemorrhaged mistakes after opening the season
2-0, but still have the time and talent to turn things around. We’ll
see if they’re willing to capitalize when they host Uni Thursday at
Newport Harbor.
Tesoro (1-4) enters its first PCL campaign without seniors and
with little confidence, while Calvary Chapel (2-3), also making its
PCL debut, has surrendered 190 combined points to five schools which
barely have that many students.
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