DECK
It was this time of the season last year when things turned sour
for two local prep football teams.
Yes, week No. 5 of the nonleague portion of the schedule doomed
both Huntington Beach High and Edison, each of whom showed promise during
nonleague play and looked forward to making a serious run at a possible
Sunset League championship.
But neither the Oilers nor Chargers lived up to that potential.
Instead, key injuries to several starters at both schools wiped out their
hopes, and both limped to the finish line of the 1998 season - although
Huntington Beach did sneak into the postseason picture by receiving the
Division I wild-card bid.
‘It was this exact week last year that our problems started to
pile up,’ Huntington Beach Coach Tony Ciarelli said. ‘Our players started
to drop, and those injuries took a toll on our team the remainder of the
season.’
The Oilers had just completed the school’s first 5-0 nonleague
record in six seasons, but injuries to Ciarelli’s squad decimated an
already thin roster.
After beating Dana Hills, 7-6, in the fifth week of the season (a
defensive struggle in which several key were lost to injury, including
all-league lineman Brendan Rosen), the Oilers struggled to a 1-3-1 league
mark.
At 6-4-1, Huntington Beach was awarded a wild-card berth, but was
hammered, 52-0, by defending Division I champion Long Beach Poly in an
opening round game.
‘Our goal all season long was to make the playoffs, but we weren’t
at full strength heading into the playoffs - and we certainly needed to
be if we held any hopes of competing with Poly,’ Ciarelli said. ‘So far
this season, the football field has been very kind to us.’
The Oilers enter the fifth week of the current season again to
face Dana Hills, and Ciarelli is hoping that his squad escapes
injury-free this time.
The only key injury the Oilers have suffered on the field so far
is a shoulder bruise to two-way lineman Brian Ruziecki, who already has
missed two games.
But in non-football related accidents, fullback/linebacker Carlos
Adame was injured in a car accident last Wednesday, and the junior is
questionable for the remainder of the season. Another player, junior
lineman Jordan Connolly, suffered an allergic reaction to a spider bite
late last week, missed the Paramount game, and his availability (as of
Wednesday) for the Dana Hills game is uncertain.
With three starters out of action against Paramount, the Oilers
suffered a 34-13 defeat - their first of the season against three
victories.
‘We’ve had to shift around a few players in the Paramount game to
compensate for those injuries, but hopefully, we can have our squad
intact for next week’s league opener with Fountain Valley,’ Ciarelli
said. ‘We’ll need all the momentum we can get for that game.’
Over at Edison, the Chargers finished their ’98 nonleague schedule
with a 3-2 mark, but injuries also took a toll just before the start of
league play, where they struggled to an 0-4-1 mark - the school’s worst
league showing.
‘We were young and inexperienced last year, and on top of that, it
was injuries to several key players that killed us the rest of the
season,’ Edison Coach Dave White said. ‘We never recovered once the
injuries began to pile up.’
Although Edison has reached the fifth week of the ’99 season
relatively unscathed, White and the Chargers received a double scare late
in last week’s game with Long Beach Wilson.
Late in the fourth of a 35-12 Charger victory, two key players,
Darryl Poston and Jimmy Thorson, went down on separate plays. Poston got
up on his own accord and limped off the field with an ankle sprain, but
Thorson, who was injured on a last-minute punt return, lay on the turf of
Sheue Field for several minutes before being escorted to the sideline.
The loss of either player - or both - would have been a crucial
blow to the Chargers, who are enjoying a 4-0 season thus far. It’s safe
to say they would not have been the same team without the two.
Poston is the county’s top rusher in three categories: yards per
carry average (9.9), touchdowns (14), and rushing yardage (751). His
numbers are even more impressive when you consider that Poston has racked
up his stats without having played an entire four quarters in any of
Edison’s first four games.
Thorson, an all-purpose player who is a dangerous kick/punt
returner, gives Edison an advantage at various positions.
White shuttered at the thought of losing either player.
‘I don’t even want to think about it,’ he said. ‘I just kind of
held my breath when Poston went down, but he popped up and he’s going to
be okay. But when Jimmy went down and was just laying there, I knew it
could be serious.’
After the game, Poston walked with a slight limp, his left ankle
bandaged, but the junior back said he was ‘fine’ and would be ready for
Arcadia, Edison’s homecoming opponent Friday.
But Thorson was a great concern to White, who, after shaking hands
with the Wilson staff at midfield, hustled over to a golf cart on the
Edison side of the field, where Thorson sat, propped up.
Initially, White thought Thorson might have broke a bone in his
leg, but he said Tuesday that the injury turned out to be a contusion of
the calf.
‘That was a major relief for Jimmy,’ White said. ‘He’s an
important player in our line-up, and to lose him would be a tough, tough
blow. But, he’s going to be back - it’s just not certain when.
‘I just don’t want to go through what our team suffered through
last year.’
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