Barons rally past La Mirada
You’ve got to hand it to the Fountain Valley High defense.
With the Baron offense sputtering throughout the night Friday, it was
the defense that turned things around against visiting La Mirada and
sparked a 16-7 nonleague win before 4,000 at Huntington Beach High’s
Sheue Field.
With the previously-unbeaten Matadores threatening to pad its 7-3
halftime lead late in the third quarter, Fountain Valley strong safety
Casey Clark came up with the play that ignited the Barons.
With La Mirada facing a second-and-10 from the Fountain Valley 17-yard
line, quarterback Chris Cox’s pass to the goal line, which was intended
for Anthony Ortega, went off the hands of the Baron’s Stephen Webber ,
then fell into the arms of Clark.
The sophomore, who also started at quarterback for the Barons,
raced 56 yards before being hauled down by a host of Matadores at the La
Mirada 44-yard line with 3:39 to go in the quarter. On the first play
from scrimmage, Nedal Abdelmuti, who finished with 98 yards on 18
carries, gained 20 on a carry around right end.
Five plays later, fullback Steven Fifita bullied his way into the
end zone, and Matt Hanson’s conversion gave Fountain Valley (2-1) its
first lead, 10-7, with 34 seconds left in the period.
It was Fifita, also a starter along the defensive line, who also
added the knockout punch early in the fourth quarter.
The 5-foot-11, 240 senior scooped up Cox’s fumble at the La Mirada
17-yard line and raced untouched to the end zone to up Fountain Valley’s
lead to 16-7 with 8:34 to play.
The Baron defense did the rest from there as it didn’t allow La
Mirada to penetrate past its own 41 during the Matadores’ final three
possessions of the game.
‘I thought our defense played another great game,’ Fountain Valley
Coach Eric Johnson said. ‘We came up with some big turnovers, and they
turned this ballgame around.’
The Fountain Valley defense recovered two of La Mirada’s four
fumbles, with Fifita recording both recoveries. Junior cornerback Chad
Triplett had a fourth quarter interception, senior linebacker Brian
Dopler had a pair of quarterback sacks and both Fifita and junior lineman
Bernard Fano each had one sack.
The final score marked the second time in three games that the
Fountain Valley defense has limited an opponent to a touchdown or less.
The Barons defeated Dana Hills, 7-6, in the first week of the
season.
La Mirada’s score, however, was a gift, as the Matadores (2-1)
recovered a Fifita fumble at the Fountain Valley 12-yard line on the
Barons’ fifth play from scrimmage.
It was the first of four fumbles on the night by the Barons (they
lost two), and Junior Vaca turned the miscue into an eight-yard touchdown
run for a 7-0 La Mirada lead.
The Matadores had gone on top, 10-0, on Mike Orr’s 47-yard field
goal late in the first quarter, but a roughing the holder penalty on the
play was called on Fountain Valley. La Mirada Coach John Mele decided to
take the points off the board and start fresh with a first down at the
15, but the decision would come back to haunt Mele: the Barons held. and
on fourth down, Orr’s 27-yard field goal attempt sailed wide left, and La
Mirada was left with a 7-0 lead.
The Barons finally got on the scoreboard with 3:07 left in the
first half on Hanson’s 32-yard field goal. The 11-play drive consumed
nearly six minutes of the second quarter clock, and the march featured
Clark’s first completion of the game after an 0-for-5 start.
The pass was a big one, too, as it went for seven yards and a
first down on a third-and-four play from the La Mirada 48-yard line.
‘You know, we’re young on the offensive side of the ball, but I
really think our offense is beginning to do some positive things,’
Johnson said. ‘As we develop as the season progresses, then I think we’ll
continue to play better as a group.
‘I thought tonight we made the progress that I wanted to from a
week ago. La Mirada’s a very good football team - and a well-coached one,
too.’
La Mirada, which already has lost star running back Mike Lemon
(broken leg) for the year, played the second half without its other top
rusher, Chris Rudiger, who suffered a concussion in the second quarter.
Rudiger did not return to the game after halftime.
For Fountain Valley, it was a nice rebound from last week’s
disappointing 31-17 loss to Centennial/Corona. In that defeat, the Barons
had three blocked punts turned into touchdowns, and also gave up safety.
There were no such breakdowns Friday night, although the offense
nearly gave the game away.
Luckily, Fountain Valley had its defense to count on.
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