Breakers to open Pacific Coast season
When the Costa Mesa Mustangs marched right down the turf at Guyer
Field last Friday night to score a touchdown, Laguna Beach coach
Jimmy Nolan braced himself for the worst.
“When they came out and immediately scored on us, I thought, ‘Oh,
man, this could be a long night,’” he said.
But, in a game that presented the Breakers with their stiffest
challenge of the nonleague season, Laguna responded with 31
unanswered points en route to a 31-9 victory.
It was Laguna’s most lopsided victory in the series between the
schools.
“We beat them in every facet of the game,” Nolan said. “Our hustle
and endurance was the key factor in that win. We could have done many
things a whole lot better Friday night, but I have never seen these
boys play so hard and put together four strong quarters of football
since my arrival here at Laguna Beach.
“That win was really something. These boys should be proud of
themselves.”
Laguna righted the wrongs it committed the previous week in a
14-14 tie with Ocean View.
Fumbles and miscues cost the Breakers a chance at victory against
the Seahawks on Sept. 16.
“George Chheng had really dug himself a hole against Ocean View,
and his confidence was really low, and he needed to step up,” Nolan
said. “He did just that. George played solid on both sides of the
ball all night long. He showed a lot of character.
“Again, Charley Bowman ran the show out there. His play at the
quarterback spot is what makes this offense tick. I ask a lot out of
Chuck, and he continues to answer the bell.”
The Breakers, who are 3-0-1, will be looking to ride the momentum
garnered from the Costa Mesa win tonight, when they open their
Pacific Coast League schedule with a home game against Northwood.
Kickoff is 7 p.m.
As Nolan says, Laguna will take on the role of David in a league
full of Goliaths.
Unbeaten Northwood rolls into Guyer Field with a 4-0 record.
The Timberwolves’ most recent victory was a 30-12 pasting of Los
Amigos, a game in which quarterback Stuart Sharpe threw a pair of
touchdown passes to Sean Curtis.
In four games, Northwood has beaten opponents by an average score
of 32-10.
The Timberwolves finished in second place in last year’s league
race.
“I think we’ll be competing against a team that belongs to a high
school with an enrollment four times greater than ours,” Nolan said.
“This team will also have three times as many players as we have.
Northwood will have a solid starting offense o7andf7 a separate,
solid starting defense, o7andf7 a separate, solid set of special
teams players. This team will keep healthy, fresh bodies in the game.
“Our team will not exit the field, with the exception of our
quarterback, who I only allow to play offense. Our boys play three
ways, on the offense, defense and special teams. So, I just wanted to
educate the public on how much respect I have for these boys who are
about to get in a war Friday night.
“We are undermanned, outsized and don’t have the strengths this
opponent has. But that doesn’t mean we are going to throw in the
towel. While we can’t control the adversity we’re about to face, we
o7canf7 control the effort. Our focus right now is giving Northwood
more fight than you’d imagine. Good things happen to teams that work
as hard as we do. If we go down, know that we’re going down swinging.
Call us crazy, but we go into every game believing we will win.”
Laguna, Nolan said, got in a good week of practice leading up to
tonight’s kickoff, thanks, in large part to the team’s scout teams.
“I want to thank our scout teams for excellent practices all
week,” he said. “These guys get beaten on all week and sacrifice a
lot for our starters to be ready come game time. We owe that [Costa
Mesa] win to our reserves.”
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