Harbor holds on
Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - It may have seemed otherwise for visiting Irvine
High, but all the big plays in Newport Harbor’s monumental 12-10 Sea View
League-opening football victory Friday night didn’t involve penalties on
the Vaqueros.
Sailors’ junior end Garrett Troncale came up with the biggest play of the
season for the hosts, blocking a 35-yard field-goal attempt by Irvine’s
Jessob Reisbeck with 4:51 remaining.
The Sailors (5-1 and ranked No. 4 in Orange County and No. 2 in CIF
Southern Section Division VI), never gave the ball back and claimed their
first win in a league debut since their unbeaten CIF title campaign in
1994.
“This is huge,” said Newport Coach Jeff Brinkley, who didn’t hesitate
terming the triumph one of his biggest regular-season conquest in his 14
seasons at the school.
“It was important for us, because we stumbled out of the gate last year
against Corona del Mar.
The Tars also stumbled in 1997 and ’96 against Woodbridge, and saw their
league season open on a sour note in ’95 against El Toro.
But there was only sweetness in the aftermath of this one, despite a
miserable start.
“We came out flat-footed,” said senior nose guard Andy Kalanz, who didn’t
start after banging up a knee in practice, and had to watch from the
sideline as Irvine (3-2-1) went 45 yards on 11 plays to open the scoring
in its first possession. “It was like we had cement boots on.”
The same appeared true of the Harbor offense, which was summarily stuffed
on its first three possessions, even though one was extended when Irvine
roughed the punter.
The penalty was the first of several costly violations for the visitors,
who committed five 15-yard indiscretions en route to seven markoffs for
90 yards.
Newport got a kick start from its own 25, when Irvine was flagged for
pass interference on the first play after Irvine’s second punt.
Newport, which had produced just 17 yards its first three series, found
its gear as senior tailback Andre Stewart kept bouncing and the line kept
pounding.
The result was an 11-play touchdown drive capped when Stewart went 11
yards behind a Travis Trimble kickout block with 3:23 left in the first
half.
The conversion kick, however, sailed wide and Irvine took a precarious
one-point cushion into intermission.
It didn’t last long, as Irvine went three-and-out and Harbor went 75
yards on 10 plays to seize the lead for good.
A 25-yard pass from Chris Manderino to Justin Jacobs got the Sailors
rolling and another interference call, on third-and-10, moved Newport to
the Vaquero 30.
Stewart, who finished with 122 yards on 31 carries, took three carries to
rip off another 26 yards, before Trimble converted third-and-one with a
2-yard dive to the 2.
Stewart walked in around the left side on the next snap and, after a
two-point pass attempt spiraled through a receiver’s hands, the hosts
led, 12-7, with nearly 17 minutes left.
Irvine, the defending Sea View co-champion, cut into the lead when
Reisbeck unloaded a 32-yard field goal which would have been good from 50
on the second play of the fourth period.
Newport went three-and-out after the ensuing kickoff, but defensive
tackle Nick Moghaddam recovered a fumble at the Irvine 43 to maintain
status quo.
Irvine, however, forced another Harbor punt. The Vaqueros then turned a
51-yard screen pass from Mike Ricci to Eric Patton into another serious
threat, but they stalled at the Harbor 18, and Reisbeck was summoned for
the go-ahead three-pointer.
“We had our block on,” said Brinkley, who watched Troncale split the
guard-tackle gap, throw his hands up and catch leather with his right
palm.
“I ran right through,” said Troncale, seemingly still stunned by his
heroics. “I don’t know if that’s the biggest play I’ve ever made, but it
has to come pretty close. I hope I have some more plays to make.”
Offensive tackle Robert Cole said Troncale’s block saved the day.
“I was on the sideline just holding hands with my teammates,” Cole said.
“I knew something good would happen for us.”
Still, Cole and his offensive mates had to take care of business, which
they did by picking up three more first downs. The final first down came
via a facemask with 1:08 left, after Stewart ran into a pile 6 yards
short of the first.
The good fortune on penalties was ironic for the Sailors, who averaged 11
penalties for nearly 93 yards their first five games.
Harbor had only four penalties for 30 yards Friday and did not commit a
turnover.
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