Prep football: Irvine stuffs Tars
Barry Faulkner
COSTA MESA - Irvine High football coach Terry Henigan appeared
genuinely surprised after his football team earned a 14-0 victory in
Friday’s CIF Southern Section championship game at Orange Coast College.
But Henigan, who hoisted his fourth section championship plaque in 10
years, didn’t have much company from the overflow crowd of 8,000.
Most everyone who witnessed this one, simply saw Orange County’s
toughest defense defend its well-earned reputation.
“They’ve done it all year,” said Henigan, who, for the first time in
his 20 seasons at the Irvine helm, did not experience defeat all season.
Newport Harbor’s defense did a job of its own, coming up with three
first-half turnovers, all of which set the Sailors’ offense up in Vaquero
territory.
But, Irvine, which became the first team to blank Harbor in 50
contests (dating back to a 38-0 loss to Santa Margarita in the 1996 CIF
Division V final), refused to buckle.
Harbor (11-3) went three-and-out, losing 6 yards, after Alan Saenz’s
acrobatic interception -- tipping a screen pass to himself at the Irvine
42-yard line, late in the first quarter.
Then, when Garrett Troncale sacked Irvine quarterback Travis Otott,
forcing a fumble Harbor’s Ian Banigan swallowed up at the Irvine 39, the
Vaqs bowed but didn’t break.
A Harbor receiver was spun down while trying to drag a defender into
the end zone, and the ball came out as the Sailor hit the ground at the
1. The ball trickled into the end zone, where outside linebacker Zach
Taylor fell on it for a touchback with 7:16 left in the first half.
Three plays later, Otott lofted a strike to Eric Patton on a sideline
streak and Patton, broke two tackles on his way to a 77-yard scoring play
with 5:45 left. The longest TD scored on Newport this season turned out
to be all the Vaqueros would need.
“We had our opportunities early and you have to stick those in (the
end zone),” Newport Coach Jeff Brinkley said. “Their defense played well,
it’s played well all year.
Dane Barton intercepted just inside Vaquero territory on Irvine’s next
offense series, but no harm was done on the scoreboard.
Irvine, as it did in its 19-14 Sea View League win over the Tars Oct.
13, got a big return on the second-half kickoff to set up a touchdown.
Godfrey Young, who has returned four kicks for TDs this fall, broke 43
yards along the sideline to the Newport 47. He went 69 yards in the
league meeting to set up the score which gave Irvine its insurmountable
lead.
“That didn’t help,” Brinkley said of Young’s return, which Otott
cashed in seven play later, connecting with Dave Doomey on a 15-yard TD
pass. The play came one snap after Young converted a fourth-and-one
situation and Doomey added his second conversion kick to all but seal the
deal.
Irvine’s defense, a maniacal band of darting demons, which averages
just 6-foot, 176 pounds, technically closed the coffin from there. It was
the Vaqs’ fifth shutout of the campaign, their third in four playoff
games. In last week’s semifinal, they held a Tustin, which had averaged
62 points its previous seven games, to six points.
Senior end Brian Porteous sacked Morgan Craig for a 9-yard loss on
fourth-and-18 at the Irvine 23 to thwart a Newport drive that began on
its 24.
Senior safety Joe Bollard, who shared Sea View League Co-Defensive
Player of the Year laurels with Saenz, intercepted at his own 1 to stop
another possession and Chris Lamm picked off another pass to end Harbor’s
final drive.
Irvine had five sacks and held Newport tailback Chris Manderino to
less than 100 yards for the first time in his 13-games playing tailback.
Manderino, the Sea View Offensive Player of the Year, gained 73 yards on
24 carries to finish with 2,141 yards for the season. Manderino, who came
in with a Newport-Mesa District single-season record 31 TDs, also caught
three passes for 36 yards, as Craig completed 17 of 31 for 163 yards.
Junior receiver Brian Gaeta, like Craig one of seven starters
returning, caught eight passes for 79 yards. His performance gave him 62
catches, the third-best single-season total in the school’s 70-season
varsity history.
Irvine managed just 69 yards rushing, but all six of Otott’s
completions produced double-figure yardage.
Patton, who sat out the last two games for disciplinary reasons, had
two catches for 92 yards.
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