Daily Pilot Football Player of the Week, Chris Manderino: No
substitution for success.
Barry Faulkner
Elbows ballooning, legs cramping, knee throbbing, lungs burning and
ribs aching, Chris Manderino finally shuffled out of the offensive huddle
toward the sideline with just more than four minutes left in the third
quarter Friday night. With the Sailors leading, 28-0, over cross-town
rival Corona del Mar, which would eventually succumb, 35-7, it was Coach
Jeff Brinkley’s decision.
For, left to his own discretion, the Newport Harbor High football
standout would never relent to anything but a direct order.
Well, most orders, anyway.
“Coach has told me if I’m tired, to tell him, so he can give me a few
plays off,” Manderino said. “But I’m able to recuperate a little on
special teams, so the rest of the time, I just want to tough it out.”
This is extremely bad news for future Newport Harbor opponents, who
will have plenty to tough out while the 6-foot-1, 205-pound
tailback-outside linebacker pounds away with abandon on both sides of the
ball.
That pounding, which increased exponentially with his recent move from
quarterback to tailback, takes a physical toll on Manderino, as well. His
32 carries against CdM, his first complete game as the featured
ballcarrier, rendered more than 226 yards and three touchdowns. They also
left Manderino bruised, exhausted and determined to prepare himself
better for life at the bottom of the pile.
“I felt a whole new level of soreness waking up Saturday,” the Daily
Pilot Player of the Week said. “I might put more padding on my arms and I
think I might have to push myself even more in conditioning during the
week.”
After quarterbacking the junior varsity to a 9-0-1 season as a
sophomore, Manderino helped lead the Sailors to a CIF Southern Section
Division VI title and a 13-0-1 record last fall. He was named Daily Pilot
Sea View League MVP and was the All-Newport-Mesa District quarterback. On
defense, his 71 tackles were three shy of the team lead and he had two
interceptions, returning one for a TD.
He opened this fall under center, but was shifted midway through the
second game, and now figures to join Harbor’s growing list of 1,000-yard
rushers.
Manderino, who played tailback as a freshman, said he was happy to do
whatever was asked, and won’t miss calling signals if it helps the Tars
stockpile wins.
“I’m starting to get the hang of (running the ball) again,” Manderino
said. “I think I’ll be able to learn as I go, make better reads and
improve. The thing I learned most (Friday) was how tiring it can be.”
Brinkley said Manderino appeared comfortable in his new role and he’ll
become more accustomed to the wear and tear.
“He’s a warrior and he plays hard,” Brinkley said. “He’s tough and he
finishes his runs, which also takes a toll on a defense. When you have a
runner like that, it’s not as inviting for the safeties to come up and
try to make tackles.”
And though he’s a power runner, Brinkley said Manderino can also make
tacklers miss.
“The great running backs have great vision, the ability to see the
field and make cuts. Chris has shown that already.”
The move definitely won’t help the bursa sacks (fluid-filled tissue
which cushions friction in the joint) he broke in both elbows last
season. He aggravates the injury each time his elbows get banged --
virtually every play. The resulting inflammation makes it appear as if
Manderino is wearing elbow pads, even when he isn’t.
And, even though he’ll be hit more on offense, Manderino said the
absence of the mental load Brinkley requires of his quarterbacks (calling
audibles and reading secondaries), will allow him an easier transition to
defense, where he can deliver some of the punishment he now takes.
“I probably like defense, because I like hitting people better than I
like getting hit,” he said.
Manderino, positioned on the wide side of the field against opposing
offenses, usually takes a head of steam into his tackles/collisions. The
results can make mothers wince.
One could fill a highlight reel with Manderino’s big defensive hits
thus far and he even mixed in an interception against CdM, setting up the
Tars’ third touchdown.
College recruiters -- he’s receiving interest from schools in the
Pac-10 and the Ivy League -- project his future at strong safety or
possibly outside linebacker if he can pack on some muscle.
For now, he’ll be content to exhaust the muscles he has, all in the
line of duty.
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