Prep football: Sequel justice?
Barry Faulkner
CORONA DEL MAR - Corona del Mar High football coach Dick Freeman
doesn’t believe the 31 lettermen returning from a team that shared the
1999 Pacific Coast League championship will benefit from any carry-over.
But, considering the 3-8 record absorbed by last year’s squad, as well
as said Sea Kings’ rather measly offensive production, letting go of the
recent past may prove critical to kicking off a prosperous new
millennium.
Perhaps afflicting the returners’ collective confidence is last
season’s 0-5 start, the program’s worst since 1965, as well as CdM’s
paltry scoring average of 11 points per game.
Only six Orange County teams averaged fewer points and they combined
for a 7-53 record.
Further, CdM produced a mere 2,063 yards of total offense. By
comparison, two running backs in the Newport-Mesa District alone rushed
for more than 2,000.
There are, however, plenty of lingering intangibles to keep the
veteran Sea Kings of sound mind. The very fact they did not succumb to a
frustrating preseason (the final two games of which featured five
touchdowns nullified by penalty), is a ringing toughness testimonial. And
this senior class has gone to the CIF Southern Section playoffs each of
its two previous varsity seasons.
But, should self-affirmation prove fleeting, a confident crop of
sophomores, coming off a 9-1 campaign which included a perfect five-game
PCL victory tour, have arrived to help walk the contenders’ walk.
Freeman reports this attitude injection from the Class of 2003 has
uplifted practice intensity, competition for jobs, and, ultimately, the
spirits of an entire roster and coaching staff.
“I think we have a real good mix of senior leadership and younger kids
willing to accept that leadership and add to it,” Freeman said. “It’s a
very competitive atmosphere, but we’re all on the same page.”
The decorated returners include seniors Nick Prosser and Blake Hacker,
a pair of diminutive outside linebackers (5-foot-11, 175 pounds and 5-6,
160, respectively last fall) who obviously know a little something about
playing with heart.
Prosser, who could also play a little tight end this season, has
pumped up to 190 pounds, while Hacker, who missed five games with a badly
sprained ankle last year, could add the featured ballcarrier’s role to
his defensive duty.
Senior safety Eric Snell, like Prosser and Hacker a first-team All-PCL
defender as a junior, should also start at receiver.
Charlie Alshuler, a second-team all-league cornerback who helped the
CdM volleyball team win a CIF Southern Section title last spring, is also
back.
Dave Richardson, a 6-5, 300-pound senior lineman, has apparently
shaken the injury and conditioning problems which have limited him to
sporadic bursts of promise his first two varsity seasons.
Freeman expects Richardson, receiving recruiting mail from big-time
college programs, to put it all together this fall.
Receiver Steven Ward and offensive lineman Matt Marston, who expects
to shift from tackle to guard, posted double-digit starts on offense,
while end Scott Biggs adds to the collection of six starters back on
defense.
But uncertainty surrounding the rest of the personnel puzzle is
typified at quarterback, where spring practice, summer passing leagues
and early fall workouts have failed to separate senior incumbent Evan
Burden, junior Fountain Valley transfer Dylan Hendy and junior Joe
Barber.
Burden, who took over when Matt Moore, now a receiver and safety, was
sidelined for the season with a collapsed lung in Week 3, passed for 453
yards and three TDs. He compiled 35 of the Sea Kings’ 47 completions (CdM
had a 41% aerial success rate as a team).
Filling out the offensive and defensive lines will be a top preleague
priority and, Richardson aside, quickness, not size, will be the team’s
biggest weapon in the neutral zone.
To that end, Freeman and Offensive Coordinator Lyle Lansdell, have
gone to a quick-hitting ground attack. The idea is to dart running backs
through holes, so sustaining blocks -- which typically requires upper
body strength equal or superior to opponents -- won’t be as vital to
ground success.
Freeman admits they’ll have to be more efficient through the air, but
a potentially strong defense may allow them to win without lighting up
the scoreboard.
A preleague campaign that includes Back Bay rival Newport Harbor will
need to prepare them for a league-opening date with Costa Mesa. The same
two teams played for the league title the final week of the ’99 regular
season, with the Mustangs handing CdM its only league loss.
The Sea Kings, winless in their last eight nonleague games (including
playoffs), open Sept. 9 against Cypress, which will have opened a week
before with a game in British Columbia.
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