Prep playoff groupings: Postseason roads get twists and turns
Barry Faulkner
CIF Southern Section playoff pairings announced Monday should add
difficulty to the postseason roads of Back Bay high schools, while Costa
Mesa and Estancia, shifting to the Golden West League, figure to face
weaker playoff competition in virtually all sports, beginning next fall.
In football, Newport Harbor remained in Division VI, which will retain
the Century, Empire and Suburban leagues. However, the Miramonte League,
which has produced its division champion the last six years (Division VII
the last four, after two Division VI crowns in 1996-97), including the
Division VII title-game combatants the last three seasons, Los Altos and
Charter Oak, will replace the Golden West League.
The Golden West League, which will also include Ocean View,
Saddleback, Santa Ana, Westminster and Orange, will shift to Division
VII, joining the Almont, Del Rio, Mission Valley and San Antonio leagues.
The PCL, including Corona del Mar, will remain in Division IX for
football. The division retains its five current leagues, including the
Freeway, Garden Grove, Orange and Valle Vista.
The change was not a surprise to Newport Harbor High football coach
Jeff Brinkley, who said he was happy to be left in Division VI. The
Sailors have reached their division title game five times the last 10
seasons, including titles in 1994 and ‘99, and have gone to the
semifinals two other times during that span.
The Sea View had produced nine straight division champions, before
Mayfair defeated Suburban League rival La Mirada for the Division VI
crown last fall.
“I thought there would be some jockeying around with Hart being moved
(from Division III to Division II),” Brinkley said. “With them looking
for someone to fill that hole (in Division III), there was the
possibility of us moving up. I think (the Miramonte League) is a very
comparable group to some of the (playoff) teams we’ve been playing. I
know La Mirada (which eliminated the Tars in the semifinals, 13-10, in
overtime) beat Los Altos last year (20-13 in Week 3).”
In addition to Los Altos (the Division VII champion in 1999 and 2000
and runner-up last year), Charter Oak (which won Division VII titles in
2001 and 1998 and lost in the final the two years in between), and Wilson
High of Hacienda Heights (the Division VI winner in 1996 and ‘97), the
Miramonte League will include Bonita and Garey next year.
News of tougher postseason competition was greeted with excitement by
CdM boys tennis coach Tim Mang and Newport Harbor boys and girls
volleyball coach Dan Glenn, who, until a change in playoff procedure
passed by the Southern Section Council last week, were relegated to
playing in divisions based on enrollment and not competitive equity.
Mang’s Sea Kings, which won the CIF Division V crown last spring and
are among the Division V favorites this season, will be in Division I
next season.
Glenn’s boys volleyball program, currently in Division II, will rejoin
the Division I arena next spring.
“It’s the way it should be,” Glenn said.
Newport will compete in Division I in girls tennis, boys and girls
swimming, girls soccer, as well as boys and girls water polo.
CdM will be Division I in boys water polo, as well as boys and girls
tennis. The Sea Kings will be Division II in boys volleyball, girls water
polo, as well as boys and girls swimming.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.