Good, better, best, never let it rest
Rick Devereux
An elementary school grammar saying goes: Good, better, best, never
let them rest until your good is better and your better, best.
While it is used to instill the proper superlatives, it is also
applicable to the work ethic of Newport Harbor High football player
Spencer Link.
Link has been playing on the varsity squad three years, earning
first-team All-Sea View League honors both as a sophomore and junior.
After a junior campaign in which he caught 53 passes for 945 yards
and 13 touchdowns and was named the Newport-Mesa Player of the Year,
Link apparently, as the rhyme suggests, did not want to rest until
his good was better and his better, best.
“I was going to a trainer on the weekends to get my speed up,”
Link said. “I didn’t feel I was fast enough and wanted to have that
extra boost after I caught the ball.”
The summer workouts apparently worked, because in his first game
of the season after sitting out the opening two contests with a
shoulder injury, Link caught six passes for 99 yards, including the
47-yard game winner with 1:07 left, and returned a fourth-quarter
punt 63 yards for a touchdown. His performance helped the Sailors
(3-0) stage a come-from-behind victory over crosstown rival Corona
del Mar and earned him Daily Pilot Athlete of the Week honors.
“Obviously when you have a guy that has been all league for two
years, you know he is a special player,” Coach Jeff Brinkley said.
“[His performance in the Battle of the Bay] exemplified what he’s all
about. He finds ways to make plays at crucial times.”
Link does have a tendency to raise his level of play to meet the
occasion. He earned Athlete of the Week laurels following a
two-touchdown performance against Corona in last year’s Battle of the
Bay. Link said he was relaxed heading into Thursday’s contest despite
seeing his first action of the season.
“Before the game, didn’t think anything of it,” Link said “I
wasn’t nervous. But once you get out there and see all the people in
the stands, I started thinking about it. The Battle of the Bay has so
much hype around it, and there were, like, 7,000 people there. That’s
a lot of people. Not to mention a lot of the people you know from
around the community.”
Link said he was trying hard to make a big play, which resulted in
some mistakes that he would like to forget.
“When I caught the hitch and fumbled (in the second quarter), I
was trying to do too much,” Link said. “When I dropped that fourth
down pass (in the fourth quarter), I didn’t want to go to school and
I didn’t want to go (injured captain) Trevor (Theriot) and tell him
what I had done.”
That dropped pass gave CdM the ball with 5:41 left and holding
onto a 17-7 lead. The Newport defense only allowed five yards on the
ensuing drive, forcing a punt.
The Sea Kings kicked away from Link the whole game, but this one
went right to him. The senior dodged a few would-be tacklers, then
sprinted 63 yards for a touchdown to make it a, 17-14, game.
“That brought us back, but I wasn’t done yet,” he said.
Following another defensive stand, the Sailors got the ball back
on their own 35 with 1:45 remaining. Link caught a 15-yard out
pattern for a first down and stopped the clocked by heading out of
bounds. Following a 21-yard catch by James Coder, quarterback Kasey
Peters called an X-in Post, the same play Peters and Link used for a
58-yard touchdown the year before. Although the yardage was different
(47 yards), the result was the same: a Newport Harbor touchdown.
“Kasey, if it wasn’t for that kid calling that play, it wouldn’t
have happened,” Link said. “Kasey called it at the right time. He was
poised enough to make it happen.”
For a player who doesn’t let it rest until his good is better and
his better, best, Link will hard pressed to improve on his
performance from the Battle of the Bay.
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