Advertisement

High School Football: Sailors different in playoffs

(SCOTT SMELTZER / Daily Pilot)
Share

Any time the Newport Harbor High football team holds a practice on Thanksgiving, the Sailors are in for a treat.

Players from the past returned to campus last week and spoke to the team. It has been a tradition under Coach Jeff Brinkley to bring back alumni. The day they come is the day before the Sailors play in the semifinals of the CIF Southern Section playoffs.

The message players like Chris Manderino give is easy. Enjoy this moment because it will be the best time of your life.

Advertisement

The Sailors tend to respond afterward, keeping their season alive, as they’re 8-2 in the semifinals under Brinkley. His team gets to compete one more time.

Manderino has been on this stage before, his last time 13 years ago. Now it’s these current Sailors turn to experience the big game.

The Sailors are making their eighth section finals appearance in Brinkley’s 28 years at the helm. They face Huntington Beach in the Southwest Division final at Angel Stadium on Saturday at 2 p.m.

The afternoon game is different for Brinkley and the Sailors. They’re used to playing under the lights and in a smaller venue.

What they are familiar with is the opponent on the field. For the second time this season, the Sailors (8-5) and Oilers (8-5) will meet.

The first time Huntington Beach won in a 40-14 rout. Brinkley walked off the field disappointed, his team unable to share the Sunset League title. That night in Huntington Beach on Nov. 8, he never figured to see the Oilers again this year, not after the two teams closed out the regular season.

“I didn’t think they would get in [the playoffs], not because I didn’t think they were a good football team,” said Brinkley, whose team shared second place with Fountain Valley and Los Alamitos, while Huntington Beach placed fifth in the six-team league. “I thought that they wouldn’t get in [as an at-large team] because I’ve never seen them take two at-large teams from the same league.”

That same league has two teams in the Southwest Division championship.

Losing out on a Sunset League crown might have been the best thing to happen to the Sailors. Since suffering their worst loss of the season, the Sailors are playing their best football.

Newport Harbor has won three in a row, beating the likes of Dana Hills, 32-13, on the road in the first round, upsetting top-seeded La Habra, 49-48, at home in the quarterfinals and then knocking off Fullerton, 28-17, at home in the semifinals. The winning streak is the Sailors’ longest this year.

To finish the year as a winner, the Sailors are going to have to slow down quarterback Kai Ross. The senior has the Oilers rolling, averaging five touchdowns per game during their four-game winning streak.

Ross is the third straight dual-threat quarterback Newport Harbor will see. The Sailors turned in their best defensive effort last week in stopping Fullerton’s Scott Lloyd (132 passing yards and 41 rushing yards), but Ross is a more dynamic quarterback.

Ross has completed 157 of 271 passes for 2,072 yards and 28 touchdowns, with only five interceptions. He has rushed 135 times for 718 yards and nine touchdowns.

In the postseason, Ross has led the Oilers past the Empire League, Sea View League and Sunset League champions. They opened the playoffs with a 31-14 upset at second-seeded Yorba Linda, followed by a 42-14 quarterfinal win at home against San Juan Hills, and then a 28-21 semifinal win on the road against third-seeded Edison.

“Obviously they kicked our tail last time out, so I would probably say they would be [the favorite] going in,” said Brinkley, whose team allowed Ross to rush 16 times for 120 yards and three touchdowns and complete 10 of 13 passes for 91 yards and one touchdown.

This section title run is different from the past seven for Brinkley. His Sailors had gone into the championship with double-digit wins every time, until this year.

While the current Sailors aren’t as dominant as those section finalist teams, they have shown they can compete with anyone.

They stunned La Habra with an aerial attack, led by quarterback Cole Norris. The junior threw for 474 yards and five touchdowns, Newport Harbor single-game records, and the Sailors eliminated a team that had won three of the last five Southwest Division titles. Norris has two standout senior wide receivers Quest Truxton (75 catches for 1,227 yards and 17 touchdowns) and Cory Stowell (79 catches for 995 yards and eight touchdowns).

Norris, who has thrown for 2,721 yards and 25 touchdowns, with only six interceptions, won’t have his center, senior Gerardo Aceves, available for the second straight game. Brinkley said Aceves injured his knee during practice last week and sophomore Elliot Frye will start at center again. Frye is one of two sophomores starting on the offensive line, along with right tackle Joey Stukonis.

The line has dealt with injuries all season. Joseph Zavala, a right guard, missed the Huntington Beach game in which tailback Chance Siemonsma, tight end Alex De Soto and defensive end Caleb O’Neal went down with leg, collarbone and concussion injuries, respectively. The four players are back and look to bring a fourth section title to Newport Harbor.

The Sailors have already met those players that have gone on to win it all under Brinkley in 1994, 1999 and 2005. They’ve taken their messages to heart.

“I have the [former players] tell them what number they wore and the kid stands up that wears that number,” Brinkley said. “It’s a pretty emotional and impactful time.”

If they can win on Saturday, these Sailors will show up the next Thanksgiving the team is practicing on to inspire future players.

Newport Harbor (8-5)

20...Trabuco Hills...35

34...Palos Verdes...33

14...Corona del Mar...34

34...San Clemente...13

21...Mira Costa...33

27...*Los Alamitos...24 (overtime)

16...*Edison...28

42...*Fountain Valley...25

49...*Marina...17

14...*Huntington Beach...40

32...ˆDana Hills...13

49...ˆLa Habra...48

28...ˆFullerton...17

(*denotes Sunset League game; ˆdenotes CIF playoff game)

Huntington Beach (8-5)

32...Bakersfield Christian...10

49…at Magnolia…14

31...at JSerra…49

17…Trabuco Hills…27

37…Downey…29

6…*Edison…48

14…*Fountain Valley…19

50…*Marina…12

14…*Los Alamitos…21

40…*Newport Harbor…14

31…ˆYorba Linda...14

42…ˆSan Juan Hills…12

28…ˆEdison…21

(*denotes Sunset League game; ˆdenotes CIF playoff game)

Advertisement