Prep column: CIF undertakes Sea Re-View
Barry Faulkner
Now that the Orange County releaguing plan has cleared its final
hurdle -- approval by the CIF Southern Section Council Oct. 8 -- the next
shoe to drop could deliver a swift kick to the Newport Harbor High
football program.
As a leading contributor to the Sea View League’s dominance in CIF
Division VI, the six-team Sea View configuration that adds Foothill to
the existing five members, might find itself in another division when the
Southern Section staff generates playoff groupings for the next four
years sometime in March.
Southern Section Assistant Commissioner Rob Wigod, the section’s
football administrator, said he has already started work aligning
leagues, usually five per division.
He said his charge is to weigh competitive equity, geography and
enrollment equally when grouping leagues together for playoff
competition. He said none of the three criteria, which are also used to
place schools in leagues, will carry more weight than the others. But
principals in Orange County have continually admitted competitive equity
is the leading consideration when weighing relative compatibility and
Wigod came to the section office from Los Alamitos High.
That being said, the Sea View League just might have worn out its
welcome in Division VI, which also includes the Century, Golden West,
Empire and Suburban leagues.
Since the current Division VI was formed before the 1998 football
season, the Sea View has produced all six of the combatants in three
title games.
Newport Harbor and Irvine have squared off each of the last two
seasons, following the 1998 title clash between Woodbridge and then-Sea
View member Santa Margarita.
Further, the last nine Sea View champions have gone on to claim their
respective CIF division title and the last 13 section title games have
included 18 Sea View representatives.
The latter run includes Sea View’s placement in Division V (1994-97),
Division IV (1992-93) and Division VI (1988-91).
The last nine seasons, six teams not from the Sea View League have
opened the division’s playoffs as the top seed, only to face elimination
each time at the hands of a Sea View foe.
Of those teams (La Mirada in 2000, Mayfair in ‘99, Servite in ’96 and
‘95, Canyon Springs in ’93 and Rubidoux in ‘92) only Servite and Canyon
springs reached the title game, before being bested by Sea View
supremacists.
Still, Wigod said, contrary to popular opinion, the Roman numerals
given divisions outside of Division I do not necessarily correspond to a
relative competitive strength of the teams in those divisions. So,
Division III should not be considered to play a brand of football that is
better than, say Division VI.
Rather, the assignment of Roman numerals is made merely for
identification purposes. This, along with its predominant alliance with
leagues also in Orange County, may allow the Sailors and its Sea View
mates to remain in its competitively cozy situation.
A survey of individual leagues sent out in January will give Wigod
additional input. After the initial plan is released to section schools,
appeals may be heard throughout April. The groupings are then scheduled
to be finalized at the April 25 section council meeting.
Despite the aforementioned Sea View dominance, the Division VI
preseason rankings, formulated by the section office, had La Mirada
ranked No. 1. Newport Harbor opened at No. 3 and, remarkably, was the
lone Sea View representative in the top 10.
Newport Harbor (7-0-1) ascended to the No. 1 ranking Monday after
previously top-ranked Foothill fell to El Modena Friday night.
Newport can protect its No. 1 seed by beating Woodbridge Friday to
claim the Sea View crown, then handling nonleague visitor Westchester
Nov. 9.
The only other times Newport opened the postseason as the No. 1 seed,
it went on to claim titles in 1994 and ’99.
The Newport Harbor varsity has company in the unbeaten ranks, as the
Tars’ freshman unit, coached by Joe Urban, is 7-0 and hoping to close out
what would be the school’s first freshman football league championship in
what Urban believes is more than 30 years Thursday afternoon.
Newport, coming off a 49-14 triumph over a Laguna Hills squad
considered to pose the biggest threat in league, hosts Woodbridge in the
Sea View finale at 3:15 p.m.
Success on the freshman level is usually a reliable barometer of how
future varsity teams will do. This makes Estancia Coach Jay Noonan’s
prediction of victory in the next three Battle for the Bell showdowns
with crosstown rival Costa Mesa even more surprising.
Costa Mesa has defeated Estancia the last three years on the freshman
level, 28-20 this fall, 32-6 last year and 42-7 in 1999.
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