Prep football: Bravehearts - Newport Harbor offensive line
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Barry Faulkner
For all of his considerable talents, perhaps the leading attribute
Newport Harbor High junior tailback Dartangan Johnson possesses is
timing. It is, after all, a very good time to be the Sailors’ tailback, a
position made considerably more attractive by the presence of what some
consider the most talented offensive line in school history.
That line, made up of tackles Robert Chai and John Debrott, guards
Bryan Breland and Chris Badorek, as well as center Jeff Marshall, created
cavernous holes for Johnson and his backfield mates Friday night. The
results included a 47-7 triumph over Back Bay rival Corona del Mar in the
Battle of the Bay XL, the second straight plus-200-yard night for
Johnson, and some heightened expectations about just how far Johnson and
the rest of the Sailors may go with this mass of humanity leading the
way.
A Newport line anchored by Division I recruits Blair Jones (USC) and
Robert Cole (Brown) helped the late Andre Stewart produce a school
single-season record 2,404 yards in 1999, a campaign that also included a
13-0-1 record and a CIF Southern Section Division VI championship.
Last year, former quarterback Chris Manderino thundered off tackle for
2,141 yards, which led to 11 victories and another berth in the CIF
Division VI title game.
This fall, Johnson has already surpassed the 600-yard mark in three
games, after the Sailors produced 366 yards on the ground against the
overmatched Sea Kings.
“They’re playing well right now,” Newport Coach Jeff Brinkley saoid in
his typically understated manor.
Chai, a 6-foot-4, 270-pound senior who earned All-CIF recognition as a
junior, is an anchor at left tackle. His rare blend of strength and
technique allows him to get more attention from college coaches than
Chris Fowler.
Breland (6-2, 245), another senior returning starter, was considered a
notch above Chai during the duo’s first two years at Harbor. A wrist
injury set Breland back last year, but the returning All-Newport-Mesa
District performer has come nearly all the way back. An injury to a
Sailor teammate prompted his move from right guard to the left side,
where Brinkley is now reluctant to separate him from Chai.
“Bryan is a very tough guy who plays with an aggressive attitude,”
Brinkley said. “He’s as tough as we get up front.”
Marshall (6-5, 215), the third senior returning starter, has already
committed to accept a scholarship from Division I-AA power Montana. “He
is a big-time center, who is as good as any we’ve had come through the
program,” said Brinkley, whose perspective now spans 16 seasons. “People
don’t realize how good his feet are and he’s extremely intense about
everything he does in his life. He became an Eagle Scout this year.”
Badorek (6-4, 270) is a junior who joined the starting lineup in Week
2. Brinkley said he has performed well enough to make replacing him a
difficult decision.
Debrott (6-7, 280), the senior right tackle, has waited his turn in
the program and is now playing well enough to attract attention from
Division I recruiters.
“If I were at some college, he’d be a guy I’d consider highly,”
Brinkley said.
No discussion of Newport Harbor blockers would be complete without
crediting the work of senior tight end Joe Foley, as well as
lead-blocking fullback David Marshall. Both are as vital to the Sailors’
trademark off-tackle “Power” play as the front five.
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