Prep football: Back Bay birthday bash
- Share via
Barry Faulkner
NEWPORT BEACH - Offense, defense and, for the most part, special
teams. Newport Harbor High’s 47-7 nonleague football victory over Back
Bay rival Corona del Mar Friday night was ostensibly the total package.
And for Sailors Coach Jeff Brinkley, it came wrapped with a birthday
bow, as his team came within two failed PATs of giving him a point for
every candle on his cake.
It was the first time Newport played on Brinkley’s birthday since
1989, but the result that night, a 7-6 loss to Huntington Beach, was
hardly worth celebrating.
This time, there was little for Brinkley to quibble with after the
Battle of the Bay XL, which played out before an estimated 7,000, many of
whom entered after halftime.
“I went out the back door of the locker room at halftime and was
shocked to see a line of people still waiting to buy tickets,” Brinkley
said. “And it was a really long line. It was great to see that kind of
community support.”
Hopefully, the latecomers were more interested in the social scene
than the outcome of the game, which was all but academic after the
Sailors’ 28-0 first-half dominance.
The third quarter featured more of the same, as the Sailors began
shuffling in substitutes with little drop-off in productivity.
Junior backup quarterback Mike McDonald completed all five of his
passes for 59 yards and a touchdown.
Junior Rhett Hartsfield, the No. 2 tailback, collected 65 rushing
yards and one touchdown after entering early in the third quarter and
several other Sailors saw their first varsity action.
“It’s always nice to those guys get on the field, because they work so
hard in practice,” Brinkley said of the reserves.
As for the starters, Brinkley was complimentary on both sides of the
ball.
“I liked the way our guys were flying to the ball on defense,” he
said. “(The Sea Kings) had been scoring some points and had run and
thrown the ball well their first two games. We had to defend the whole
field, against a lot of different looks. I thought our defensive staff
did a good job getting the kids ready to make those adjustments.
“Offensively, we had hoped to establish the run and I thought we did
that. We ran it so well, we didn’t need to throw it that much. We didn’t
get to many third-down situations (just two on their first four touchdown
drives and one of those was third and inches).
Brinkley, however, was disappointed about surrendering a 27-yard fake
punt pass for a first down. In addition, CdM blocked one conversion kick
and another Harbor PAT failed when the center-holder exchange went awry.
Brinkley singled out his kickoff coverage team for its strong work,
including kicker Adam Kerns. On eight kickoffs, CdM’s average field
position was its own 24. Twice Newport tackled the CdM return man inside
his own 20 and Kerns boomed one kickoff out of the end zone for a
touchback. Dave Erickson (twice), Matt Encinias and safety Ben Soza made
some of those stops on kickoff coverage.
Brinkley is pleased with his 2-0-1 team’s play thus far, especially
since all three games have been on the road.
“If we can keep doing well on the road, I really think it will help us
in the long run,” Brinkley said. “We’re getting used to traveling and
we’re going to have more home games later in the season.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.