Prep football: Size matters
Barry Faulkner
CORONA DEL MAR - The proliferation of enrollment-based playoffs has
helped Corona del Mar High athletics increase its already impressive
collection of CIF Southern Section championship banners in recent years.
But when it comes to football, a game in which 22 starting positions
(offense and defense) make enrollment proportionally more important than
any other sport, Coach Dick Freeman’s Sea Kings are annually asked to
pick on playoff competition that draws from a player pool nearly twice
that of its own.
And while CdM benefited from placement two seasons ago in the
enrollment-challenged Pacific Coast League, whenever the Sea Kings stray
into the land of larger schools (the Division IX playoffs), the numbers
are, well, largely unimpressive.
Since leaving the Sea View League (in which it went 4-11 its last
three years, including one on-field loss later reversed by forfeit),
Freeman’s last two teams have gone 6-3 against PCL oes. Included in that
run was a league tri-championship in 1999. But, against teams outside the
PCL, CdM, with an enrollment listed at 1,000 last year, is 2-11 the last
three seasons, including three straight first-round playoff losses.
Those playoff defeats have come at the hands of South Hills (1,650
enrollment), Valencia (2,000) and Servite (1,600, when its all-male
enrollment is doubled to compare with coed schools).
And while Freeman, entering his seventh season, won’t complain about
his typical postseason plight -- section football playoff divisions are
grouped by perceived strength of league, rather than enrollment -- he
admits a lack of bodies lessens his team’s annual margin for error.
This margin has been pared more precariously this fall, when a
36-player roster, already diminished by a lack of expected returners, has
been further weakened by a deluge of minor practice-field injuries.
Justin Wald, who started seven games at defensive end and another at
fullback as a junior last season, did not return due to a problem with
concussions.
Adam Dunn, who made 9 of his 10 starts at center as a junior and was
to be, Freeman believed, the poster child for senior leadership for this
year’s unit, will miss the season after badly breaking a leg in a July 27
car accident.
Joe Barber, who led last year’s 5-6 team in completions (46), passing
yardage (642) and touchdown passes (nine), chose not to return for his
senior campaign.
In the three conditioning days required before the team’s first
practice in full pads, the Sea Kings saw four of their five top running
backs felled by an array of sprains, strains and pulls, covering nearly
every appendage and joint (hip, shoulder and ankle to name a few).
The toll sustained by similar backfield injuries in recent years can
be statistically quantified.
Forced to feed backup quarterbacks into the fray due to myriad damage
to starters, the Sea Kings, in 53 games since the graduation of
quarterback and 1995 CIF Division V Co-Player of the Year Josh Walz, have
thrown 53 interceptions. In those 53 games, at least 41 have featured one
aerial delivery to the opposite-colored jersey. Further, CdM has gone 29
games without completing more than 10 passes.
Starting tailbacks have fallen victim to late-season ankle injuries
two of the last three years, factoring into the early playoff exits.
In 1998, senior Nate Lemmerman appeared well on his way to 1,000
yards, before an ankle injury late in the ninth game limited him to just
one carry the next two weeks, for minus-1 yard. He finished with 920
yards.
Last year, Blake Hacker also succumbed to an ankle problem in the
final week of the regular season. Hobbled, he collected just 16 of his
1,401 rushing yards in the playoff loss to South Hills. His absence also
contributed to a three-game losing streak that carries into this fall.
Freeman, however, remains optimistic about this group, which includes
just 11 seniors, but has a cast of juniors who won the PCL crown as
freshmen.
Depth at the skill positions and the expectation of a wide-open PCL
title race this fall, are additional positives. But there are also plenty
of question marks.
Senior quarterback Dylan Hendy, who started seven games last year and
threw for 451 yards and six touchdowns after transferring from Fountain
Valley, is one of six starters back on offense.
Junior running backs Mark Cianciulli, Keith Long, Matt Boyce and Matt
Cooper are expected to recover from their early season setbacks and
spearhead the ground game, which will also rely upon second-team
all-league hole punchers Steven Russell, a 6-foot-3, 245-pound senior
tackle, and John Daley, a 6-1, 215-pound junior center.
But none of those backs gained as many as 200 yards last season and
Dunn’s injury will mean three first-year starters will join the five-man
front wall. The Sea Kings have, however, produced six 1,000-yard rushers
in the last nine years and Freeman has faith that line coach Miguel Romo
will have his hogs in order.
Senior receiver Steven Ward caught 18 passes last year and could be
Hendy’s favorite target.
Defensively, senior lineman Steve Shipman, a second-team all-league
performer last fall, headlines a group that includes three primary
returning starters, though eight additional returners started at least
one game on that side of the ball.
A shift from the four-three to the four-two-five will allow the
Freeman-coordinated defense to rely more upon quickness than brawn. This
is a plus, considering the number of coaches who exceed 220 pounds (four)
equals the number of players with similar bulk expected to make an impact
in the trenches.
Freeman acknowledges the lack of numbers will put a premium on
avoiding injuries. But, he believes, it could also foster greater team
unity.
“We had a JV team a couple years ago that had about 17 or 18 guys and
they seemed to do OK,” Freeman said. “(The small roster) could be a
rallying point.
“When you go with this many people, you’re going to need some luck.
But I think if we play well enough to get a (better playoff draw), we
could play a while (in the postseason).”
Last year’s team was outgained, 3,451 yards to 2,971, and outscored,
285-277, and Freeman hopes to end a streak of four straight losses in
openers, when the Sea Kings debut their new navy blue helmets Sept. 7
against Cypress.
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