Orange Coast seeks offensive punch
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Barry Faulkner
A little more than two weeks into fall practice, Orange Coast College
football coach Mike Taylor is still getting to know his players. As
important, he is still studying their transcripts, hoping to resolve
the eligibility issues that can cloud the already unstable process of
forecasting team performance at the two-year level.
So, as the Pirates prepare for Saturday’s opener against Glendale
(5 p.m. at Newport Harbor High, as the LeBard Stadium renovation
continues), Taylor and his staff will need all the time they can get
to sort out who is and is not available.
On the ineligible list, thus far, is defensive end Justin
Williams, who had 10 1/2 sacks en route to first-team All-Mission
Conference honors last fall.
Competition at several positions has also made lineup predictions
tenuous, as the Pirates come off their second straight 4-6 campaign
burdened by a four-game losing streak.
Losing has become increasingly common for the Pirates, who have
produced just one winning season in their previous 10 (a 6-5 mark
that included a Mission Conference title and a bowl appearance in
2000).
Taylor, entering his sixth season at the helm, has a new offensive
coordinator -- Mike Mitchell -- to try to improve on a paltry 16
touchdowns last season.
OCC was last in the 12-team conference in total offense last fall
(just fewer than 257 yards per game), last in rushing and 10th in
passing. The Pirates averaged just 14.9 points, just 9.7 in their six
losses.
The lack of production virtually wasted a season of strong
defense, in which the Pirates led the conference in fewest passing
yards allowed (155.2 per game), were sixth-best against the run and
finished third behind Saddleback and Mt. SAC in total defense (270.6
yards per game).
“Only scoring 16 TDs in 10 games, you’re not going to win too may
games” Taylor said. “Our defense played hard last season and, this
year, I think we’ll be as good or better.”
Injuries, including the loss of starting quarterback Beau Budde
(now about 85% recovered from surgery to repair two torn knee
ligaments, Taylor said), contributed to the offensive funk last
season.
Budde’s experience gives him the early edge in a quarterback
battle that includes sophomore Fordham transfer Kyle Basanez and
freshman Chad Schmigel.
Budde completed 29 of 59 passes for 359 yards with three
interceptions last season. His dad, Brad Budde, a former USC
All-American offensive lineman who played in the NFL, has joined
Taylor’s staff as the tight ends coach.
Basanez played in seven games at Fordham in 2002, while Schmigel
may have the strongest arm, Taylor said.
An offensive line that returns starters Ryan Pahua, a 6-foot-5,
315-pound tackle, center Kyle Collins (6-3, 290), Ricky Mercado (6-2,
235) and Blake Sorber (6-3, 334), looks for vast improvement.
Jon Ioane (6-5, 390), who altered his plans to play at Oregon
State, is a freshman who could also be a standout up front.
Sophomore tight end Jon Garcia caught 11 passes for 142 yards last
season, which makes him the leading returning receiver. He was
second-team all-conference in the American Division (the 12-team
conference is split into two divisions).
Last year’s leading rusher (Chris Vega with 459 yards) has moved
on, leaving sophomore Jimmy Niutapuai (10 yards on five carries) as
the leading returning ground gainer.
Taylor anticipates a committee will handle the rushing chores this
season.
“We have guys who run hard, but aren’t big-time breakaway guys,”
Taylor said. “But I think we’re more athletic [in the backfield] than
last year.”
Among the candidates is 5-8 sophomore Robert Aoki, whom Taylor
said is among the strongest players on the team. Aoki can bench press
225 pounds 30 times, Taylor said.
Freshmen Matt Padilla, Matt Downs and Patrick Harrigan are
additional tailback candidates, while freshman Qualic Vargas joins
Niutapuai as the primary fullbacks.
Russ Willison, like Garcia, is a quality tight end, Taylor said,
while a corps of wideouts includes sophomores Dan Matsumura, Brian
Johnson and Ismael Isais.
Defensively, Aaron Miller, a bounce-back from UNLV out of Mission
Viejo High, could join a linebacking crew that includes sophomore Joe
Mitchell, a second-team all-conference performer in 2003, outside.
Sophomore Scott Drake and freshman Dave Ronning are the
front-runners at middle linebacker, while Taylor believes this year’
secondary is better than the group that helped the Pirates top the
conference in pass defense last season.
“We’re faster back there than we’ve been,” said Taylor, who
singled out sophomore safety Chucky Linman as the leading catalyst.
Sophomore Ryan Davis (6-1, 270), a second-team all-conference
choice last fall, freshman Mike Mataafa (6-2, 300), freshman Alex
Mulu (6-0, 280) and Fresno State bounc-back Ricky Miller are among
those expected to spearhead the defensive line.
The coaches’ preseason poll tabbed OCC fifth in the six-team
Mission Conference American Division, behind Mt. SAC, Palomar,
Cerritos and Long Beach, respectively, and ahead of Golden West.
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